(139 ) 
to acutish and distinctly cuspidate at the apex, 1-2 cm. long, 4-12 
mm. wide, finely many-veined, the veins parallel, somewhat anas- 
short-tipped, nearly glabrous or with a few scattered hairs when 
mature, 4-5 cm. long, 5-7 mm. wide, imperfectly septate between 
the seeds; seeds obliquely quadrate, compressed, dull, 4-5 mm. 
long, about 2 mm. broad. 
Cay north of Wide Opening, Exuma Chain (&ritton & Mills- 
paugh, 2774, type); Little Galiot Cay, Exuma Chain (Britton 
& Milispaugh, 2847); Great Exuma (Arition & Millspaugh, 
jogz). Apparently related to C. drachypoda. 
CassIA INAGUENSIS Britton, Bull. N. Y. Bot. Gard. 3: 443. 
Grand Turk (Vash & Taylor, 3829). Legume linear, straight, 
flat, 3 cm. long, 3.5 mm. wide, sparingly pubescent with scattered 
airs. 
Cassia BICAPSULARIS L. 
Grand Turk (Mash & Taylor, 3837). Previously reported from 
the Bahamas by Grisebach as collected by Swainson. 
Tricera bahamensis (Baker). 
Buxus bahamensis Baker, in Hook. Ic. Pl. pl. 7806. 
Low coppices and scrub lands, widely distributed. New 
Providence (Curtiss, 2138; Britton, 87; Coker, 68; Britton & 
Brace, 663). Cay north of Wide Opening, Exuma Chain (&rct- 
ton & Millspaugh, 2800). Great Exuma (Britton & Millspaugh, 
3083). Watling Island (Coker, 474). Fortune Island (Brace, 
g6r). Inagua (Nash & Taylor, 10737). Grand Turk (Nash & 
Taylor, 3811, 3831). Andros (orthrop, 460). The leaves vary 
from broadly oblong to oblong-obovate. 
Picrodendron macrocarpum (A. Rich.). 
Schmidelia macrocarpa A. Rich. in Sagra, Hist. Cubaro: 116, 
pl. 30 
Picrodendron baccatum var. bahamense Krug & Urban, Bot. 
Jahrb. 15: 308. 1893. 
Numerous specimens indicate that the Cuban and Bahamian trees 
of this genus are identical, and that they are specifically distinct 
from P. baccatum (L.) Krug & Urban, doc. czt., which is known to 
me only from Jamaica. This conclusion differs from that of Prof. 
Urban, who considered the Cuban and Jamaican plants conspecific 
