To2 PLANTAE CHINENSES FORRESTIANAE. 
acutis, glabris, 2-6 cm. longis, medio fere 2—2°5 cm. latis ; spica 
sublaxe multiflora, usque ad 12 cm. longa; bracteis erectis, 
ovato-lanceolatis, acuminatis, ovario plus duplo_ brevioribus ; 
floribus in genere inter minores, viridibus ; sepalo intermedio, 
erecto, ovato, obtuso, glabro, vix o°3 cm. longo, lateralibus 
deflexis, falcatis, anguste oblongo-ligulatis, obtusis, glabris, 
sepalo intermedio aequilongis, petalis oblique ovato-lanceolatis, 
obtusis, sepalis paululo brevioribus ; labello ligulato, obtuso, 
simplici, glabro ante ostium calcaris carnoso-incrassato, deflexo, 
petalis aequilongo, calcare cylindrico glabro, incurvulo, ovario 
subaequilongo ; anthera apice leviter retusa, canalibus abbrevi- 
atis; rostéllo semiorbiculari, parvulo; processibus stigmati- 
feris canales antherarum paulo superantibus, ovario cylindraceo, 
glabro, c. 0-7 cm. longo. 
“Plant of g-12 inches. Root tuberous. Flowers green, 
fragrant. Dry mountain meadows on the eastern flank of the 
Lichiang Range. Lat.27°25’N. Alt. 11-12,000ft. September 
1g06.”’ G. Forrest. No. 2875. 
By the first aspect this species reminded me of H. natalensis, 
Rchb. f., with which it has somewhat the habit and the look of 
the flowers in common, but in the parts of its flowers it is very 
different, and by them belongs to a very different group in the 
neighbourhood of H. leptocaulon, Hook. f. 
Habenaria Orchidis, (Lindl.) Hook. f. in Fl. Brit. Ind. vi, p. 142 
(1890). 
‘“‘ Plant of g-14 inches. Flowers white or pale pink, strongly 
fragrant. Grassy openings in pine forests on the eastern flank 
of the Lichiang Range. Lat. 27° 15’ N. Alt. 11-12,000 ft. 
July 1906.” G. Forrest. No. 2650. 
Habenaria pectinata, Don, Prodr. p. 24; Finet in Rev. Génér. 
Bot. xiii (1901), p. 531. 
‘Plant of 1-2 ft. Root tuberous; flowers creamy or 
greenish-white, fleshy. Boggy situations by streams along the 
base of the eastern flank of the Lichiang Range. Lat. 27° 10’N. 
Alt. 8500-g000 ft. August 1906.’’ G. Forrest. No. 2807, 
No. 4884. 
Satyrium setchuenicum, Kranzlin in Engler’s Botan. Jahrb. 
XX1X (I9OI), p. 266. 
“Plant of 6-10 inches. Root tuberous, flowers rose-pink, 
fragrant. Dry, grassy slopes on the eastern flank of the Lichiang 
