AUDITIONS. 



429 



top of the barren branches, stalked, entire or 

 lyrate. Stem branched, woody at base. Pet. 

 white, veined. Seeds smooth, p. 5. Kocks 

 between Caproline and Pont a la Leccia, Cors." 

 — Gr. and G. (Pet. obversely oblong. Upper 

 L. oblongo-lingulate, Bkkt.) According to 

 Gr. and G., the true B. balearica differs from 

 tJds in having yellow jjetals abruptly con- 

 tracted into a claw, an emarginate, nearly 

 sessile stigma, and a very slender pod. They 

 call B. robertiana the plant which, following 

 Loiseleur, I have called balearica, a7id describe 

 the seeds as strongly and elegantly pitted. 



p. 34, add note to Cistus albidus : 



Messrs. Gr. and G. find a hybrid between 

 this and C. crispus. 



p. 34, after Cistus crispus, 



C. Pouzolzii. L. at the base of the 

 branches wrinkled and undulate ; the others 

 ovali-lanceolate, not wrinlded, with prominent 

 nerves. This plant has the down of C. albidus ; 

 the L. at the base of the branches are those 

 of C. crispus; the habit, the inflorescence, 

 and the flowers, the style excepted, resemble 

 those of C. monspeliensis. p. 6. Alais. Le 

 Vigan. Mtp. A^arbonne. — Gb. and G. 



p. 39, add note to Viola hirta : 



Gr. and G. mention a hybrid between this 

 and V. alba. 



p. 42, add to Reseda lutea, 



/3. Jacquini. Seeds larger, not shining, 

 shagreened. 



p. 46, add note to Bianthus monspessulamis : 

 According to Gk. and G., two forms of 

 hybrids are met with, between this and B. 

 sylvaticus, i. e. B. Seguieri. 



p. 55, before Arenaria balearica, 



A. modesta. Viscido-pubescent, erect, 

 subdichotomous. Lower L. lanceolato-oblong ; 

 upper nearly linear, acute. Sep. oval, acute, 

 nerveless. Pet. as long as sepals, a. 6. Aix. 

 Mars. Perpignan. Le Gard. Cors. — Gk. and G. 



p. 55, after Arenaria ciliata, 



A. ligericina. Stems tufted, entirely 

 herbaceous. Plant covered with spreading, 

 glandular hairs. Sep. 1-nerved. Pet. -| longer 

 than calyx. L. oval or lanceolate, pubescent, 1- 

 nerved. p. 6, 7. Florae. — Gr. and G. In A. 

 ciliata the L.and Sep. have each several nerves. 



p. 57, after Mmhringia trinervia, 



lyi. pentandra. L. ovate, not ciliate. 

 Sep. 1-nerved ; all hairless. Pet. 0. Sta. 5 : 

 the Fil. not reaching to above -g of the sepal. 

 a. 5, 6. Olive-grounds. Cors. — Gr. and G. 



p. 58, after Cerastium atrovirens, 



G. Riaei. Stalk of Fruit refracted, as 

 long as calyx, -- as long as curved Caps., and 

 continued in the same line with it. Sep. thin, 

 almost translucent, with a narrow scariose 

 margin, hairless at top, twice as long as petals. 

 a. 5, 6. Cult. Treves. Le Gard. — Gr. ajid G. 



p. 59, after Cerastium lalifolium, 



C. psrrenaicum. Pet. and Sta. ciliate. 

 Bracts like the L. Stems long, scaly and hair- 

 less at base. Fl. -stalks solitaiy, or in pairs, 

 as long as ('aps., reflected after flowering. Pet. 

 hai'dly half as long again as sepals. Shell of 

 Seed much larger than kernel. L. oval, or 

 ovali-lanceolate. p. 9. Col de Nouri, VaUee 

 de Llo, e. Pyr. — Gr. and G. 



p. 59, after Cerastium arvense, 



G. Soissieri. Shell of the Seed much 

 larger than its kernel, and attached to it only 

 at a single point. Caps, large, bellying, nearly 

 straight. Cal. and Stalks covered with curled 

 bail's, more or less viscid. L. lanceolate or 

 Knear, woolly, p. 6. Glaciere de Bastia. — 

 Gr. a7id G. This large shell to the seed is 

 attributed also to C. latifoKum and C. pyre- 

 naicum, and is likewise supposed to C. steno- 

 petalum, a species which in other respects 

 seems hardly distinguished from C. arvense. 



p. 60, after Elatine hexandra, 



E. campylosperma. Seeds curved like 

 a horse-shoe. Pet. 4. Sta. 8. Fl. alternate ; 

 Fl. -stalks usually longer than L. L. longer than 

 stalks, a. 5-8. Nantes.- — Ge. and G. 



p. 63, add to Malva parviflora, 



/3. microcarpa, Gr. and G. Hairs tufted. 

 Hyeres. Toulon. 



p. 66, after Hypericum humifusum, 



£S. corsicum. Stem procumbent, with 4 

 prominent lines. L. semiamplesicaul, with 

 pellucid dots. Sep. finely acmninate. p. — 

 Gr. and G. Monte d'Oro, Corsica. 



p. 68, after Erodium cicutarium, 



E. tenuisectuiu, Ge. and G. Bistin- 

 guished, apparently, from E. cicutarium by 

 being perennial, the flowers in each umbel 

 fewer, the L. more finely divided, and by the 

 want of a fold below the circular depressions 

 on the summit of the valves of the fruit, p. 

 Shore of Corsica. 



p. 70, add to Geranium palustre, 



)8. Endressi, Gr. and G. Pedicels of Fr. 

 shorter, erect, covered with soft spreading 

 hairs, w. Pvr. 



