none ietanoa 
ENGELMANN—CUSCUTA. 519 
reading, pointed,” prove.—In the temperate as well 
ede pic al , arts of fudia, from the Himalaya, Wal- 
lich! 1318 & 1319?; Lady Dalhousie ! Set ia 1109 & 
2183; Strachney & Winterbottom! 1 & 2; Hofmeister! 
Hooker, f & Thomson ! Sikkim, the same! Khasia, the same! 
to the low lands of the coast of Coromandel, Roxburgh, and 
to dey Gardner! 616; Thomson! and Jay a, Zollinger! 
2839.—The specimens from the islands are eedinckaliy stout, 
and have a larger calyx than the ordinary form. It often 
occurs with verrucose bracts, pedicels, and calyx or even ver- 
Teose stems; this is C. verrucosa, Sweet, Fl. gard. t. 6, not 
Engelm.; C, ‘Hookeri, Sweet, hort. br. p. 290; C. reflexa, var. 
verrucosa, Hook.! fi. exot. t. 150. 
wen 8, BRacuystiamA 3 C. reflexa, Wallich! Cat. in part, 
ery in Lin. Trane, Choisy, DC. Prod. 1. ¢., and most 
ra que- 
mont! 149 % 2520, de Silva!” in Wall. Cat. 4-78 - the 
Punjab and the western Himalaya, Hooker, f. & Th n 
: of cemont, 149, from Bengal, has the corolla a Bar tt 
of var, . and the short erect stigmas of var. 83 st le dis- 
tinet, as long as the st ni 
C. anguina, _Edgeworth! + Oe Lin. Soc. 
XX., 86, from 
er is a small flowered form with more ina ars di- 
otherwise the same as var. . 
in Spr. n. Ent. I. 145, and DC. Prod. IX. 
fm the Wabash, is perhaps the same as C. glomerata, 
Ped js, Uva sires or Ampelepogon, is the name 
given to the numerous capillary of 5 Cus te hich 
had ' Pp stems a Cuscuta w 
of pee have been found parasitic on the unripe 
vine; they often seem to be without flowers; 
the ey have been ascertained to belong to C. 
och, in tink XX 748, from Asia 
o ete it may be a depauperate form of C. 
ee E, le 0 Auton Wa un od 
18, a8 well as _—- Willd., a species of 
