(444) 
the upper surface faintly shining, the under side dull ; ee leaflets 
with 
sessile or with petiolules 1-2 mm. long, the ter minal 0 a 
petiolule 3-8 mm. long; panicles several, poarch as ines as the 
leaves or shorter, the slender peduncles 1-6 ¢ . long; pedicels 2~3 
mm. long; calyx-teeth broadly triangular, ae ” petals oblong- 
lanceolate, acute, 2.5 mm. yong 5 fruit 6-8 mm. long, only one 
cavity seed-bearing; seed 4-6 mm. long, acute, short-stipitate. 
Moujean Harbor, Little Inagua, Oct. 20, 1904 (Nash & Taylor, 
i190, type; 1204, 1205); abundant on Inagua (Wash & Taylor, 
1279, vee 4393). Erroneously referred by Hitchcock in Ann. 
Rep . Bot. Gard. 4:69, to Bursera angustata Griseb., of 
Cuba. 
DrRYPETES DIVERSIFOLIA Krug & Urban, Bot. Jahrb. 15: 353. 
1893. 
Drypetes Keyensis Krug & Urban, loc. czt. 354. 1893 
These names turn out to belong to the same species, and dzversz- 
folia has precedence. The type locality of this is Hog Island, off 
New Providence (Aggers, g125), where it is abundant, and it is 
seen in all the coppice area of New Providence, sometimes reaching 
a height of 15 m., with a trunk up to 4 dm. in diameter (Britton & 
Brace, 348, 662, 808, 859). Its bright white ripe oval fruits, 
which are 2 or 3 cm. long, are very conspicuous; when young they 
are oval or oblong and finely pubescent. The leaves of seedlings 
are always spiny-toothed, and those of D. Keyenszs are identical ; 
they are well shown in Szmfson’s 2zz from Bahia Honda, Florida, 
and I observed them on Sand’s Key, Florida. It was such leaves 
that induced Professor Urban to propose the name dversifolia ; 
at the time the species was described he had seen neither flowers 
nor fruit of it. What appears to be the same species occurs on 
Inagua, with falcate leaves (Vash & Taylor, 965, 7328). 
ACALYPHA SETOSA A. Rich. 
New Providence (race, 267). 
ACALYPHA OSTRY4FOLIA Ridd. 
New Providence (Brace, 385), probably introduced from the 
southern United States. 
Bonamia Cupana A. Rich. 
New Providence (Brace, 241, 340); Cat Island ( Coker, 428). 
GyMINDA LATIFOLIA (Sw.) Urban [G. Grzsedachié Sargent]. 
Frequent on Inagua (Mash & Taylor, 987, 889, 1061, 1283), 
shrubby or forming a tree, 3.3 m. high; also at Clarence Harbor, 
