8 THE BERMUDA JUNIPER AND ITS ALLIES. 
have received very fine specimens from Bermudas.’’ He goes on 
sort is generally confounded with the Bermudas Cedar, and taken 
for the same, but the a of it which were sent me by the 
late Dr. Houstoun prove them to be different trees 
The Jamaica Berry- bearing ‘Ouclae mentioned as s No. 9, and con- 
cerning which Sloane’s Catalogue is cited, grows, according to 
Miller, in Jamaica, and also in the other islands of the West 
Indies. This, he goes on to say, ‘is generally confounded with 
the Bermudas Cedar and taken for the same; but the specimens of 
it which — sent to me by the late Dr. Houston prove them to be — 
different tree 
unan re Jamaicensis, i. 88, 1814) quotes Sloane and 
Browne, and adds, ‘‘ The Ber mudas Juniper, commonly called 
Bermudas Cedar, i is a native of Ja — pi thew It appears voubtfal 
whether Sloane’s tree be the same as Browne’s, and, indeed, 
whether either of them be Shanty the same species as the 
bermudiana 
In 1848 Sir William Hooker published in the London Journal of 
Botany, ii. 141, t. 1, ana — accompanied by a description, of 
Juniperus bermudiana of Linneus from Bermudan specimens. Sir 
William PS rani both the ieuuding sabatilae and the imbricate ovate 
forms of foli 
pecs * (asar) ae barbadensis under virginiana, and 
kept up be ana as dis 
mens from the Bahamas, Jamaica (Sloane), Antigua, and Bar- 
bados. These localities point to the conclusion that Grisebach’s 
barbadensis is referable to virginiana. 
Parlatore (1868) considered barbadensis and bermudiana to 
two names for one and the same species, but which he pep 
different from J. virginiana. 
Carriére (1855), Gordon (1858), Kent (Veitch, prise 1881), 
and Beissner (1891) all make two species,—virgini and bermu- 
diana. The three first named refer the barbadensis of E renee to 
Sargent, in his Silva of North America (1896), Paranal 7 
J. virginiana, gives a very fall list of synonyms, but doe 
include among them the barbadensis of Linneus, The ber ons 
of the Swedish botanist is seemingly referred to as J. virginiana var. 
— of Vase 
To complete our “record of publications referring more or less 
directly + the Bermudan and to the West Indian species, we may 
again call attention to the publication of Mr. Hemsley’s articles 
already mentioned. In the Botany of the — (1884), p. 81, Mr 
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