67 
PEPEROMIA pereski#ro.i. 
Pereskia-leaved Peperomia. 
DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA.—Nar. Orv. PIPERACE, Humb. et Kunth. 
Gen. Cuar.—Spadiz cylindraceus, floribus undique tectus. Flores herma- 
phroditi, singulus squama suffultus. Stamina duo. Anthere uniloculares. 
Stigma indivisum. Bacca mon onosperma.— Kunth. 
Peperomia pereskiafolia; caule erectiusculo, foliis ter senisque obova- 
tis acutis petiolatis trinerviis carnosis glabris, spadice terminali soli- 
tario. 
P. pereskizefolia, Kuntu, Syn. Pl. Equin. Orb. Nov. v. i. p. 120.——Huma. et 
Kuntu, Nov. Gen. et Sp. v. i. p. 56. 
Piper pereskiefolium, Jace. Coll. v. iv. p. 352.—Ic. Rar. v. ii. t. 212.— 
Wutp. Sp. Pl. v.i. p. 167.—Vaut, Enum. v.i. p. 352.—Re. et Scuuttz, 
v- i. p. 329..—Haw. Sazifr. Enum. &c. (1821) P. Il. p. 3. 
paar too more in height, nearly erect, di- or trichotomously branched, 
, brownish-green, succulent, throwing out the rudiments of roots 
tanned of the leaves. Leaves two or three inches long, verticil- 
late, from three to six in a whorl, obovate, acute, carnose, glabrous and 
dark green above, below paler and three-nerved; the base running down 
into a footstalk, which is about half as long as the lamina. 
ovato-elliptical. Azther oblong, yellow, tapering down into a very short 
footstalk. Pollen white, minute, spherical. Germen small, obovate. 
Stigma minute, appearing glandular when viewed under the microscope. 
* 
JACQUIN first described this species of Peperomia, as an 
inhabitant of the island of Venezuela, and HumBoLpT after- 
wards as being frequent near Caraceas and Cumana in South 
America, both in hot (calidis) and in temperate situations, at an 
elevation of between 30 and 300 toises, flowering in January 
VOL. I. 
