Plante Lindheimeriane. 193 
397. Sicyos ANGULATUS, Linn. Bottom woods of Comale 
Creek, climbing trees. May. 
398. CYCLANTHERA DISSECTA, Arn. in Hook. Jour. Bot. 
3. p. 280. Discanthera dissecta, Torr. § Gray, Fl. 1. p. 
696. Echinocystis pedata, Scheele in Linnea, 91. p. 586. 
Margin of woods and hedges. June, in flower. — The genus 
Discanthera is correctly referred by Prof. Arnott to Cyclan- 
thera of Schrader. 
399. CucuRBITA PERENNIS: radice carnoso maxima; foliis 
strigoso-canescentibus cordato-ovatis vel triangulatis sursum 
angustatis indivisis vel subsinuato-repandis margine denticu- 
latis; calycis lobis subulatis tubo sequalibus; fructu globoso. 
— Cucumis? perennis, James in Long’s Exped. 2. p. 20; 
Torr. in Ann. Lyc. New York, 9. p. 242; Torr. & Gray, 
FI. 1. p.543. Plains and prairies, in dry, clayey or sandy 
soil, near San Antonio and New Braunfels. May.— “ Trail- 
ing on the ground. Root from six inches to three feet thick, 
fusiform, yellow inside.” Fruit yellow, globose, two or three 
inches in diameter." — This plant has been in cultivation in 
the Cambridge Botanic Garden for the last two or three years, 
from Texan seeds. It flowers freely, and has produced full- 
grown fruit, which, however, has not ripened. Our plants 
are diecious, but it is moncecious, according to Dr. James. 
It may be the Cucurbita foetidissima, H. B. K.,as Dr. Torrey 
long sinee suggested, but that plant is said to be an annual, 
like the rest of the genus; besides, ours is not fetid. In its 
calyx, gamopetalous campanulate corolla, exappendiculate 
anthers, and even in the tumid margin of the seeds (although 
said by Dr. James to be acute) it accords with Cucurbita. 
Mr. Fendler met with the plant at Santa Fe; Dr. Gregg, 
between Saltillo and Parras, and, according to Dr. Engel- 
mann, * Dr. Wislizenus found the same plant in the moun- 
tains of Chihuahua, with pyriform fruit.” 
/^ 400. C. Trxawa: (an C. ovifera, var.?)  "Tristemon 
Texanum, Scheele in Linnea, 91. p. 586, & 22. p.359. Mar- 
gin of thickets, in moist woods, on the banks of the Upper 
