320 The Botanical. Gazette. [August, , 
Valparaiso, Chile, and recently from the San Francisco Bay region. 
All the specimens seen from the United States were from ballast soil. 
Now well established about New York city. (Addison Brown, 1880) 
x «x *« Stem short, fleshy. 
31. A. PUMILUS Raf. Med. Repos. 5: 360, 1808. 
species. 
32. A. acutilobus (A. Br. & Bouché), nom. nov. 
Euxolus emarginatus A. Br. & Bouché Ind. Sem. Hort, Berol. 1851, not 
Salzm. ex Mog. 
A. viridis Index Kewensis 1: 937, in part. 
Habit of A. emarginatus: the leaves narrower and more 
retuse, almost obcordate with acute lobes: inflorescence axil 
lary, crowded toward the tips of the branches in a loose lealy 
spike: bracts very conspicuous, setose, at least twice the . 
length of the utricle, in this respect differing radically from 
all of the Euzolus section. 
Two of the sheets examined bear the signature of A. Braun, dated 
“Indices Semimum © 
the Berlin Bot. Garden by A. Braun and Bouché. We saw pe 
men from the Bot. Gard. Harvard University 187- 5 pear All 
Herbarium Lake Forest University, Lake Forest, It. 
