" 
56 The Botanical Gazette. [February, 
more compressed fruit and carpel, prominent dorsal and inter. 
mediate ribs and winged lateral ones, etc., etc 
Enantiophylla Heydeana, n. sp. Plate V.—From 12 to 
15°" high and much branched: leaves large, 3-ternate or 2-ter 
nate-pinnate, or the upper ones simply ternate or pinnate; 
leaflets lanceolate, acuminate, 5 to 7.5 long, glabrous above, 
paler and minutely scabrous on the veins, sharply and finely 
serrate; petiole broad and inflated: inflorescence large; upper 
branches verticillate, terminated by an umbel; peduncle 3 to 
7.5°" long; rays 12 to 30" long; pedicels 6 to 8™™ long: bracts 
of involucre and involucel several, linear, and with scarious 
margins: fruit 10”" long; wings of lateral ribs about as broad 
as body; the dorsal ribs sharp and equal.—Collected by Ro 
salid Gomez, in fruit, at Santiago, Depart. Zacatepequez, at 
an altitude of 6,500", 1891; and by Heyde, in flower, along 
of 3,000", May, 1892. Distributed by John Donnell Smith 
under nos. 788 and 3,352 respectively. 
CORIANDRUM SATIVUM L.—TIntroduced. Santa Rosa 
Dept. Santa Rosa, at an altitude of 3,000, July, 15 
no. 3,347. Collected by Heyde and Lux. 
DAUCUS MONTANUS Willd.—San Miguel Uspantan, De 
Quiché, at an altitude of 6,000 to 12,000", April, 1892, 
3,355- Collected by Heyde & Lux. 
Bloomington, Ind., and Washington, D. C. 
Influence of anestheties on plant transpiration.’ 
ALBERT SCHNEIDER. 
WITH PLATE VI. 
I. Historical and critical. 
function and transpiration, which led him to give his final 1 
port on plant anzsthesia in the July number, 1891, of # 
*The researches described in this paper were ( carried on in the labo! 
of physiological botany of the University of Minnesota at Minneapolis. 
