( 367 ) 
‘* A scarce shrub, about 6 feet high and very slender, growing in 
wet shaded forest-mould.” Calapampa, rate oe 16, 1894. 
Similar to zo. 2245, but that isa tree. (Vo. 2 
OREOPANAX FULVUM E. March.; Mart, Fl. Bras Ii: 254. ‘* Very 
slender shrub about 20 ft. high, in dry forest-mould.” Coroico, 
September, 1894. (Vo. 2466.) 
OREOPANAX BOLIVIENSE Seem. Jour. Bot. 3: 272. 1865. (Vo. 
I892.) 
OREOPANAX MEMBRANACEUM Rusby, Mem. Torrey Club 3°: 42. 
‘A simple-stemmed shrub about ro ft. high, in shaded forest- 
mould.” Uchimachi, near Coroico, July 22, 1894. (Vo. 2356.) 
Oreopanax grosseserratum sp. nov. 
Staminate plant. 
Younger portions of the branchlets and inflorescence densely, and 
both leaf-surfaces sparsely, dark-red glandular-scurfy ; oo 
very eee =r leafy ; Baie 1-5 cm. long, slender; blades 
—I2¢em. 2-4 cm , lanceolate to oblanceolate, mostly 
blunt at he nee ae He the apex, the margi in very unequally 
cm. 
base aerial the bracts 5 mm. long, eae ovate, acuminate; 
petals 5, purple, eit at the base, 4 mm. long, 1.5 mm. broad, 
lance-oblong, acutish; filaments slightly exceeding the petals, the 
anthers white, 1.5 mm. ee styles connate, crooked, shorter than 
the filaments. (JVo. z 
Species near O. ee The plant was at first regarded 
as of a distinct genus, but Dr. Harms kindly points out that the 
flowers, being staminate, may well have the styles connate. 
CORNACEAE 
Cornus sp., probably undescribed. (Vo. 7799.) 
CAPRIFOLIACEAE 
ViBURNUM AYAVACENSE H.B.K. Nov. Gen. 3: 428. (Vo. 2820.) 
Visurnum TinoiweEs L. f. Suppl. 184. (Wo. 7885.) 
RUBIACEAE 
CINCHONA suCCIRUBRA Pay.; Klotzsch, Abh. Akad. Berl. 1858: 
60. (Wo. 2229.) Cultivated? 
