Catalogue of Plants groidng in East-Florida. 297 



StanJeya ? amplexifolia, foliis integris ? amplexicaulibus, 

 lloribus corymboois siliquis nutantibus. 



Observations. — Of this plant whose genus is conse- 

 quently doubtful, we have seen only seeding specimens 

 which Mr. Ware collected in the arid pine forests. The 

 whole plant appears to have been smooth and glaucous, 

 the stem terete, herbaceous, low, and branching towards 

 the summit. With the radical leaves we are unacquainted, 

 those few which remain on the stem are cordate-ovate, 

 amplexicaule, and eiitire. The flowers have been aggre- 

 gated in a close corymb ; the peduncles are filiform. The 

 siliques curved downw-ards, are conspicuously stipitate, flat, 

 and two and a half to three inches long, the stipe about 

 three fourths of an inch, with the peduncle somewhat 

 shorter. The dissepiment is equal and parallel with 

 the valves. The seeds are alternately attached to either 

 side the suture of the dissepiment, and are small brown, 

 oval, striated and compressed. The cotyledones are sim- 

 ple or undivided, and the radicle curved. 



MONADELPHIA. 



Lobelia crassiuscula. Mich. 



Lobelia *aphylla, minima ; caule filiformi subsimplici 

 squamosa, pedunculis remotis elongatis. 



Observations. — Found by Mr. Ware in shady swamps 

 accompanying Tripertella coerulea, from which the dried 

 specimens are scarcely distinguishable. Root perennial. 

 Stems filiform, four to six inches high, generally simple, 

 bearing from about one to five remote, long pedunculated 

 flowers. Capsule elliptic-ovate. 



Passiflora *Warei, foliis inferioribus trilobis acniis, su- 

 perioribus indivisis ovatis, petiolis, biglandulosis, peduncu- 

 lis, subgeminis. 



Observations. — Lower part of the stem suberose. 

 Leaves smooth and shining, of a thin consistence, i<v. ng 

 short biglandular petioles, the lower ones two aiifs three 

 lobed, the upper simply ovate, all acute. Stipules ■.,ov.e. 

 Peduncles conimoniy a pair in each axill, about the 



