(370) 
way, the cup-shaped tube nearly 3 mm. broad, the lobes broadly 
triangular-ovate, obtuse, coriaceous; stone brown with a purple 
summit, ribbed. (Vo. 22370.) 
Chiococca alba (L.). (Lonicera alba L. Sp. Pl. 175. Chtococca 
racemosa L. Syst. ed. 10. 917.) ‘*Atree 15 ft. high, growing 
in wet forest-land, the flowers yellow.” Coripata, April 20, 
1894. (Wo. 2746.) 
FARAMEA SALICIFOLIA Pres], Symb. Bot. 24. ff. 70. (Vo. 2655.) 
Faramea maynensis Spruce, in B. & H.f. Gen. 2: 121. Name 
only. 
Glabrous; stems slender, herbaceous, angled in drying, the in- 
ternodes 1 dm. long, dilated upward; stipules nearly 1 cm. long, 
connate two- thirds of their length, keeled toward the top, the keel 
continued into a terete awn; petioles 2.5 cm. long, rather narrow 
for the size of the leaf, chaancied above, the channel continued into 
neath, where the midrib an ees pairs of principal, very slender 
coarsely and angularly reticulate between, with alternating, much 
more slender secondaries; peduncles (but one seen 
blue-green, like the rachis and pedicels, the parce subtended by 
an irregular, cup-shaped involucre; branches of the involucre, like 
the pedicels, dilated upward, the latter about 7 or 8 mm. long; 
calyx-tube 1.5 mm. long, campanulate, strongly oo the limb 
lighter-colored, 1.5 mm. broad, shallowly lobed, the lobes acute; 
corolla-tube 7-8 mm. long, infundibular-cylindraceous, the limb 
in bud ovate, obtuse, 5 mm. long by 4 mm. broad, when expanded 
rotate and 1.5 cm. or more broad. (lVo. 2076.) 
The same as Spruce 4946, etc. in Herb. Kew sub & selzczfolza. 
FARAMEA MONTEVIDENSIS DC. Prodr. 4: 497. (Vo. 2075.) 
I think this is the same plant that Muell. Arg. has called Rudgea 
micrantha (Flora 59: 454). 
PALICOUREA TRIPHYLLA DC. Prodr. 4: 526. (Specimen without 
number. ) 
Palicourea papyracea sp. nov. 
Inflorescence puberulent, otherwise glabrous ; branches stout, 
terete, dark-colored ; stipules (those seen impe erfect) connate for 2 
most oblong, the lower broadly ovate, the upper gradually, the 
lower abruptly acuminate at the base, abruptly short-acuminate and 
