(352) 
similar texture to the leaves; petioles 3-5 cm. long, stout; blades 
4- 
sinus, short-acuminate and acute, some 3-lobed with the lateral 
lobes much smaller and short and broad, irregularly crenate-dentate, 
thick, dark-green, finely and strongly reticulate, strongly bullate by 
the veins impressed above and very prominent underneath; panicles 
small and loose, with few spreading branches, leafy with small 
leaves similar to the stipules; pedicels nearly 1 cm. long, very 
po the ee slender, nearly straight; sepals occasionally 
prickly, 8mm. long, 5 mm. broad, ovate, abruptly short-acuminate 
and acute, many purplish; petals 1 cm. long (white?), strongly 
gated, filiform, aie. ae cNe 
FRAGARIA CHILENSIS Duchesie, Hist. Frais. 165; Mill. Gard. 
Dict. ed. 8. no. 4. (Vo. 1962.) 
Potentilla lignipes sp. nov. 
Pilose with long, appressed white hairs; base stout, woody, 
rough _ black, imbricated, ovate, acuminate scales; stems 
numerous, 1-4 dm. long, slender, prostrate or oe , branched, 
on ae the internodes mostly 3-5 cm. long; sti ipules about 
mm. long, 2 mm. broad, lance-oblong, ae sub-herbaceous ; 
petioles 5—7 cm. long, very slender; blades 1.5-2 cm. long, 2-2 
cm. broad, cordate, 5-foliolate, the leaflets oblanceolate to obovate, 
about 5 or 6 pairs, the venation prominent below, lightly impressed 
above; pedicels Saeae exceeding the leaves, very slender; outer 
broad, obcordate, pale-yellow; stamens about 20, two-thirds the 
length of the sepals, the filaments stout, bright-purple, inserted 
into the pce white-pilose base of the calyx, the anthers ovoid, 
nearly 2 mm. long; ovary o.5 mm. long, reniform, shining, green, 
the Hone straight style more than 1 mm. long, reddi sh. (.Vo 
7966.) 
ACAENA ELONGATA L. Mant: 200. (Vo. r82r. 
ACAENA OVALIFOLIA R. & P. Fl. Per. 1: 67. (Specimen without 
number.) The same as Ruséy 467. 
EriopoTrya japonica (Thunb.) Lindl. Trans. Linn. Soc. 13: 
102. 1822. (Aespilus japonica Thunb. FI. Jap. 206.) “A 
stout tree, 30 feet high, cultivated and escaped from cultivation, 
the flowers white, the fruit edible. Local name + Mesperus.’” 
Coripata, February 28, 1894. (Wo. 2066.) The same as 
Rusby 629. 
