S33 
69 ENGELMANN—CUSCUTA. [519] 
large, sg se — ” prove.—In the temperate as well 
as the tropical parts of India, from the Himalaya, Wal- 
lich! 1318 ke 131923 Lady Dalhousie! Jacquemont! 1109 & 
2183 ; ee & etn aon 1 & 2; Hofmeister’ 
to Ceylon, Gardner! 616; Thomson! and Java, Zollinger! 
2839.—The specimens from the islands are remarkably stout, 
and have a larger calyx than the ordinary form. It often 
occurs with verrucose bracts, pedicels, and ne or even ver- 
Engelm. ; e Hookeri, pT hort. br. p. 290; C reflesa, var. 
verrucosa, Hook.! fl. ex 
Var. 8, BRACHYSTIGM ane reflect, Wallich ! Cat. in part, 
Rapeworth 3 in Lin. vai, Choisy, DC. Prod. 1. c., and most 
authors, not Roxb., C. pentandr a, Heyne! in Hb. "H. B. Pe- 
trop.—Flowers smaller; lacinie } or > the length of the 
tube; anthers shorter, sessile at the throat of the corolla; 
Jacquemont, 149, from Bengal, has the obrdlla «nd anthers 
of var. a, and the short ere ect stigmas of var. 9; style dis- 
tinct, almost as long as the stigmai. 
C. anguina, Edgewo orth! Trans. Lin. Soc. XX., 86, from 
the Himalaya, is a small flowered form with more ‘deeply di- 
vided tube, otherwise the same as var. 9, 
C. aphylla, Raf. in Spr. n. Ent. I. 145, and “e4 Prod. IX. 
461, from the Wabash, is perhaps the same as C. glomerata. 
C. Epibotrys, Uva barbata or Anoe ae gon, is the name 
© the numerous capillary stems of a Cuscuta which 
of the grape vine; they often seem to be without flowers; 
in one cre — have been ascertained to belong to C. 
Epithym 
; akon Koch, in Linnea XXII. 748, from Asia 
inor, I have not seen; it may be a depauper ate form of C. 
brevistyla. 
C. triflora, E. Syst h in Pl. Drege, from the Cape of Good 
Hope, is, as well as C. funiformis, Willd. a species of 
Cassyta 
