stipplementary to the Encyc. of Plants and Hort. Brit. 247 



2524. CIRRH.E V A 22642 viridi-purpurea var. Fryaraa Fl. Cab. No. 94. 



Differing very little from the species. {Fl. Cab., March.) 

 2542. CCELO'GYNE 29733 Wallichidwa Mag. of Bot. 6. 25. (see p. 78.) 



C. ocelldta Lindl. " This beautiful plant has just flowered imperfectly with 

 Messrs. Loddiges, who imported it from India." (B. M. R., No. 35., April.) 



Sarcochllus olivacens Lindl. " A New Holland epiphyte of no beauty." 

 " The flowers are small, and of a yellowish green." (BjM. R., No. 27., April.) 



Cymbidium vridifdlium Cunn. On decayed trees in damp shady woods. 

 The plant was alive at Kew. (B. M. R., No. 37., April.) 



C.f A vanda-looking plant, in habit very much like V. teretifolia. {B. M. R., 

 No. 31., April.) 



2571. CALA'NTHE 22796 z/eratrifblia R. Br. 



Found in Ulawarra, near Port Jackson, by Mr. Allan Cunningham, in August, 

 1822. (B. M. R., No. 39., April.) 



2558. BLE V TX4 22752 Tankervlll«e. 



Synomjme : Phajus grandifblius Loureiro. 



This plant Mr. Cunningham discovered in September, 1824, growing in 

 extensive swamps on the shores of Moreton Bay. {B. M. R., No. 40., April.) 



2562. BRASAVO v L^ 



*cuspidata Hook, spear-lipped ^ E] el § ... W Trinidad 1838. D p.r.w Bot. mag. 3722 



A very elegant species of Brasavola, received from Trinidad with many 

 others, by John Moss, Esq., of Otterspool, near Liverpool. It is nearly allied 

 to B. cucullata Br. (Epidendrum cucullatum Botanical Magazine, t. 543.). 

 {Bot. Mag., April.) 



2547. DENDRCTBIUM [D trees Bot. reg. 1839, t. 20 

 aureum var. pallidum Lindl. pale golden-Jloivered ji [A] or 1 ja.mr Pa.Y.w Ceylon ? 



A beautiful species, with pale yellow and white flowers. The fragrance is 



delightful, being " something intermediate between violets and primroses." 



{Bot. Reg., April.) 



[1839, t. 22. 

 crumenatum Swartz pouch-stemmed _£f E2 el 1 au W Ceylon^ 1836. D trees Bot. reg. 

 Synonymes : Angrce^cum crumenatum Rumphius ; On^chium crumenatum Blume. 



Rumphius first figured and described this species without mentioning its 

 habitat. Dr. Blume found it in Java, Sir Stamford Raffles in Sumatra, and 

 Mr. Nightingale, who sent it to the Duke of Northumberland, in Ceylon. 

 The flowers are white, varying, according to Blume, to pink, " with leaves more 

 or less oblong and coriaceous. It is one of the easiest of the genus to manage, 

 and well repays the cultivator the trouble he bestows on it." All it requires 

 is, to be kept warm and moist during the growing season, and cool and dry 

 during the season of rest. {Bot. Reg., April.) 

 29819 formosum handsome ^ E3 spl 1| ap.my W.Y Khoseea 1837. D tree Paxt. mag of bot. vi. 49. 



-f-D. linguceforme Swartz. The flowers are of a greenish white, and of no 

 beauty. The leaves are hard, thick, and tongue-shaped, having the texture of 

 those of the aloe. The plant is a native of the country round Sydney, where 

 it was discovered by some of the earliest botanists who visited New South 

 Wales. {B. M. R., No. 26., April.) 



+ D. terelifdliimi It. Brown. A small creeping species, of no great beauty, 

 " with deep green, fleshy, taper leaves, between 2 in. and 3 in. long, and solitary 

 flowers of a dull yellow, streaked and spotted with dull purple ; the labellum 

 is white. It and all the following species are natives of New South Wales." 

 {B. M. R., No. 29., April.) 



D. tetragonum Cunn. Found on " the stems of small trees, in dry shaded 

 woods, Moreton Bay." {B. M. R., No. 30., April.) 



D. tortile Cunn. Perhaps a Polystachya. Found on trees 100 ft. high, 

 Moreton Bay. {B. M. R., No. 31., April.) 



D? pygmcB'um, D. Caleyi Cunn. Found on rocks in Ulawarra. {B. M.R., 

 No. 32., April.) 



s 4 



