F300 
[516] TRANS. OF THE ACAD. OF SCIENCE. 66 
73. C. tuputirormis, Krocker! Siles. I. p. 261, t. 36; @. 
monogyna, auctt. Fl. germ. al.—On willows, etc., on the banks 
of streams from eastern ot north-eastern Germany, Silesia, 
where it seems to be common on the Oder, Lessing! Geep- 
pert! Giinther ! al., Bohemia and Austria, Kovats! to omapal 
feoreniar: and to central Russia, Kasan, Graff!—F low eae 
essile or on at last shignely plongases ¥ pedicels ; cym 
p- Tam 
x, etc. from the banks of the Wolga, Fischer! 
Beeker! Tiers it seems to join the western form, eastward 
* through the -southern parts of Asiatic Russia, Caucasus, Hb. 
ooker! Soongaria, Schrenk! 229 & 306, b. (the last a form 
with very slender flowers and longish pedicels) ; Buchtar- 
minsk, Karelin & Kiriloff! 926; Altai, Ledeb bour! Bunge! 
Gebler ! 180, to the river Angara, Turezani noff! 
so happens that C. lupuliformis properly designates the spe- 
cies which in Europe and Asia extends north of the 43d or 
44th degree, and C. monogyna that which grows south of 
that latitude. 
74. C. GiganTE, Griffith, notul. I. 243—On Tamari 
Siah-sung ravine, Affghanistan, 10,300 feet high, Gatun? 
1031 (6 83) —Griffith’s s specimens corresponding best with his 
description are all parasitic on Tamariz and not on Salix or 
P 
