26 PLANTAE CHINENSES FORRESTIANAE. 
Scapi 8-15 cm. longi; racemi 5-8 cm. longi, angusti, laxiflori. 
Bracteae ovatae, acuminatae, 3-4 mm. longae. Pedicelli 5-6 
mm. longi. Flores minuti, virides. Sepala subconniventia, 
ovato-oblonga, obtusa, 3 mm. longa. Petala anguste ovato- 
oblonga, obtusa, 3 mm. longa. Labellum profunde trifidum, 
3 mm. longum; lobi laterales subfiliformes, suberecti, lobus 
intermedius oblongus, obtusus, carnosus ; calcar subglobosum, 
i mm. longum. Columna lata, vix 1 mm. longa; processibus 
stigmatiferis minutis. 
“Plant of 4-10 inches. Flowers green. Barren, damp 
moorland on the western slopes of the Tsan-Shan Range, near 
head of Yang-pi pass. Lat. 25° 40’ N. Alt. gooo-10,000 ft. 
W. Yunnan, September 1905.’ G. Forrest. No. 906. 
Ducloux, No. 22 
Closely resem bling H. Bulleyi, Rolfe, in habit, but dwarfer, 
and very different in its deeply three-lobed lip and short 
subglobose spur. 
Habenaria ensifolia, Lindl. Gen. and Sp. Orch. p. 321; Rolfe 
in LFS. iii, p. 58. 
“Valleys of Mekong and Salwin, Teng-Yueh-—Talifu route. 
Elevation 6000-10,000 ft. Moist pastureland. Flowers green. 
Yunnan, August 1904. G. Forrest. No. 263. 
Habenaria acuifera, Lindl. Gen. and Sp. Orch. p. 325; Hook. f. 
Fl. Brit. Ind. vi, p. 57 ; Rolfein IFS. iii, p. 57. 
“Moist hill pastureland, Nantien valley, Bhamo-—Teng- 
Yueh route. Elevation 4000-5000 ft. Flowers bright yellow. 
Yunnan, July 1904.” G. Forrest. No. 185. 
Habenaria Miersiana, Champ. in Hook. Kew Journ. Bot. 
vii, p. 37; Hook f. Fl. Brit. Ind. vi, p. 60; Rolfe in I.F.S. 
iii, p. 60. 
“Sides of gorge between Chien Chuan-cho and Niu Kai, 
Yunnan. Elevation 8000-9000 ft. September 1904.” G. 
Forrest. No. 256. 
“Dry, grassy hillsides, Chien Chuan valley. Alt. 7000-8000 
ft. Flowers white. Yunnan, 1904.” G. Forrest. No. 257. 
Hemipilia flabellata, Bur. et Franch. in Journ. de Bot. v, 
p. 152; Rolfe in IFS. iii, p. 62. 
“ Dividing ridge between Hoching and Lichiang valleys. 
Elevation go0o ft. Near Ling-Shan Ho river. Flowers purplish- 
rose. Yunnan,1904.”’ G. Forrest. No. 1 
