(445 ) 
long, 0.7-2 cm. broad, ovate, lightly cordate, acuminate and acute, 
sharply and coarsely serrate, thickish but flaccid, green above, yel- 
low underneath, the midrib and 8-10 pairs of secondaries scarcely 
long, parted nearly to th ele e, the lobes lanceolate, obtusish; 
ovary 1 mm. broad, 0.5 mm. long, very deeply 3-lobed, the styles 
1mm. long, stout, erect-spreading, yellowish, puberulent, the stig- 
mas terminal, small; staminate flowers not seen. 
‘« A climber, 6 ft. high, in dry clay and gravel. Flowers green.”’ 
Coroico, September, 1894. (Vo. 2454. 
Species at first thought identical with AYolton’s plant from New 
" Grenada, but that has elongated racemes, much larger bracts and 
long-pedicelled flowers. 
Tragia Bangii sp. nov. 
Hispid-pilose throughout; root vertical, stout, strongly few 
branched; stems erect or ascending, slender, sparingly poche 
leng, 0.75-2.5 cm. broad. ovate, cordate, acute, serrate-dentate, 
the teeth somewhat rounded but shortly and acutely pointed, thick- 
ish, pale-green, the venation rather coarse, lightly prominent, the 
secondaries 6-8 pairs; spikes solitary in the axils and lightly pan- 
icled at the summit, 2-3 cm. long, slender, incurved, rather densely 
flowered, the bracts similar to the stipules; calyx of the pistillate 
flower deeply parted, ae lobes linear-oblong, 4 mm. long; poo e 
nearly 1 cm. broad m. long, densely white-pilose; seed 4 mm 
long, light yellowish- ean: veined. 
‘¢ Small plant, a few inches high, the flowers yellowish-white ; 
scarce on clayey hillsides.” Coripata, Yungas, April ro, 1894. 
(Wo. 2725.) 
Renan TRIPHYLLA Lam. Encyc. 2: 258. “A ae 
growing in wet mould by the roadside, the flowers green.” 
Coripata, May 10, 1894. (Wo. 27812.) 
DALECHAMPIA CANESCENS H.B.K. Nov. Gen. 2: 98. The same 
as Holton 845 and 846. ‘*A climber, growing in dry, gravelly 
soil, the flowers greenish-white; scarce.” Coripata, March 15, 
1894. (Wo. 2092.) 
URTICACEAE 
CeLTIs MoRiFOoLIA Planch. Ann. Sci. Nat. II. 10: 311. 1848. 
(No. 1902 
TREMA MICRANTHA (L.) Blume, Mus. Bot. Lugd.-Bat. 2: 58. 
