946 
1886; Bacon; Mary C. Reynolds, 1877 ; Chapman ;* Fredholm 
no. 65, 1893; Curtiss, no. 2210, in part. H. J. Webber, no. 125. 
22. Physalis ciliosa n. sp. 
Perennial from a slender creeping rootstock, upright, branched, 
2-3 dm. high; stem terete, scarcely striate, together with the 
pedicels and calyces ciliate with long and white jointed hairs; 
leaves 4-7 cm. long, ovate, truncate or slightly cordate at the 
base, subentire or with a few coarse teeth, sparsely hairy on the 
veins, long-petioled, thin and not conspicuously veiny ; peduncles 
very slender; calyx turbinate, resembling that of P. arenicola ; 
corolla funnelform-campanulate, apparently without dark mark- 
ings ; fruiting calyx ovoid-pyramidal, sunken at the base. 
In habit it most resembles P. heterophylla ambigua, but differs 
in being much more slender, in the thin leaves, in the longer and 
finer hairs and in the corolla, calyx and peduncles, which are those 
of P. aremicola. lt might have been included in the following 
group, but itlacks the short dense pubescence, which is character- 
istic to the species belonging there. The following are the speci- 
mens found in our herbaria. 
Florida : Chapman (in Herb. J. Donnell Smith, Harvard Uni- 
versity, Columbia College, and A. W. Chapman, type); Curtiss, no. 
27,in part. 
Tennessee: Gattinger (in Herb. of J. Donnell Smith and Wm. 
y) 
Georgia: Darby (Gi, Wm. M. Canby, 1869. (?) 
VI. Heterophyllae: Perennials from a slender rootstock or stout caudex; pubescence 
dense, not stellate, short, more or less viscid or glandular (except in Z. 
viana), often mixed with long flat jointed hairs; fruiting calyx more or less 
distinctly 5-angled and, except in the last species, more or less sunken at the 
base; leaves from oval or rhombic to reniform. 
23. Physalis Peruviana L. Sp. Pl. Ed. 2,1670. 1763. Willd. Sp. 
Pl. 1: 1022; Nees, Linnaea, 6: 464; Don, Gard. Dict. 4: 449; 
Walp. Rep. 3: 24; Dunal in DC. Prod. 13: part 1,440; Roxb. 
Fl. Ind. Or. Ed. 2, 1: 563; Gray, Syn. Fl. 2: part I, 233; 
Roem. & Sch. Syst. Veg. 4: 674. 
P. esculenta Salisb. Prod. 132. 1796. Willd. Act. Nat. Cur. 
Berol. 4: 197; Roem. & Sch. Syst. 4: 674. 
* Between this and Z. Virginiana. 
t Specimens with very large nearly smooth leaves, but the form and pubescence 
ofthe calyx show that it belongs here. Probably an overgrown individual. 
