114. 
cordato-lance a mucronatis dentato- 
r 
illies.—** Caulis sesquipedalis, fores, 
albicans, ramosus. Znvolucri foliola du- 
plice ordine, subsequalia, ovato-lanceola- 
ta, spinuloso-mucronata, margine sca- 
riosa. Corolle cerulee. us SOT- 
dide " Don, in litt— his we 
have not s 
= ian Pewee (Drozia) wrens, Hook. 
P. Peppigü, Less. Syn.p. 411. 
90 srs ee virens, Don, in Linn. 
208, 1830—fide Don. 
Bridge A 238.) 
; ned our plant, 
which is doubtless sonia with Les- 
sing’s, to be his C. wrens, we — 
the Peruvian locality given by him 
Ruiz and Pavon's MSS. to be ecrit 
The rachis is n and the achenia 
oe villou 
wae Toning onsen a Becki 
et Arn.); foliis coriaceis lineari- 
bus pritni integerrimis spinoso- 
ciliatis supra lævibus (ha e transversim 
rugulosis) utrinque pilis minutissimis 
also compres- 
cartilagineis adspersis, a 
so (immaturo) — ac — glan- 
duloso-pubescenti.—East coast of Pa- 
spas Dr. Eights. —This ‘differs from 
Doniana, Less., P. recurvata, 
Less., both yet to the same sec- 
tion, and very closely allied, by the 
ulose 
a) 
leaves not bei 
near the margin, not on the margin, as 
at first sight they pue: suce its being 
much recurv Tie ac 
ium is pro- 
pee: gabos, when — in P. 
764. (5) Perezia (Euperezia) Magella- 
nica, Less. in Linnea, v. 5. p. 23. S 
E cium Magellanicum, Linn. 
ahl in Skrivt, Nat. Selsk. 1. p. 10. t. 
come pese — Cand.— 
765. = 3 Porcia (Enereia cartha- 
Am.); caule oligo- 
768. 
Lag.— 
CONTRIBUTIONS TOWARDS A FLORA OF SOUTH AMERICA. 
tissime albide scarioso-marginatis spino- 
oo ovariis papulosis, rachide 
labro. —Clarionia carthamoides, Gall. 
ni Cordilleras of “n mito ha 
1 , Cordilleras, 
Bridges n. 4 
(7.) Pe erezia , (Euperezia) — 
m 
* fohis lanceolatis acuminatis ra- 
naceis margine copiose setaceo-spinulo- 
sis, ca s amplexicaulibus, c 
spinuloso - ciliatis. — Clar: 
Don, MSS.—Caulis ami. filiformis, 
simplic issimus, sesquipedalis. — ra- 
eiu egent petiolata, 3—4-pollic: 
o-viridia. Involucrt Joliola 1 li 
noari-lanceolata on S brana 
cea.” Don tt, — With ilie we are 
minae ME, ; we Mono it to be one 
Ue eres s plants, and therefore — 
is a mere state of P. carthamor 
767. (8.) Perezia (Euperezia) pili fira, 
Hook: et Arn.—Clarionia ph ifera, Gill. 
Don in Phil. Mag rem 1832.) p. 388. 
Guillem. Arch. 2, p. 463.—Cerro de la 
Polcura, Andes of Mendoza, Dr. Gillies. 
—tThe petioles of the radical leaves are 
broad, and at least as long as the limb: 
the segments are closely approximated, 
and tipped with a white rigid hair or 
bristle. It is a small species, scarcely 
more than an inch and a half or two 
inches high. 
e» Dolichlasium glanduliferum, 
D. Lagasce, tee n Phil. 
Mag. (Apr. 1832.) p. 
Arch. 2. p. 465. Wess of Us 
of Mendoza, Dr. Gillies —« 
rennis, virens, copiosissime glandulosa. 
Caules erecti, teretes subflexuosi, mo- 
nocep cares. Folia petio- 
lata, pinnatisecta ovato-ob- 
pr mucronatis bun integerrimis, ri- 
nemen. solitarium, 1 — Corol- 
le albe. .Achenia 
"9 multiflorum, involucri foliola omnia 
tegerrima, acuminata, exteriora lanceo- 
lata, interiora lineari-lanceolata, elongata. 
osculi omnes s tubu loso- 'bilabiati! labiis 
vel superanti. „Styli rami exserti, apice 
truncati, Achenium — 
hirsutum, rostro tenuioiri achenio 
oe Miete LU a T BRA. o OA ee. 
