8 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
Speciei precedenti affinis ; pee floribus majoribus, tomento 
_densiore patente, habitu robust 
6. CERATOSTIGMA ABYSSINICUM am hers. in Schweinf. & Aschers. 
Aufzihl. Nil-Liind. 288 ( (1868) ; Oliv. in Flor. Trop. Afr. iii. 
487 (18 
Valoradia abyssinica Hochst. in Schimp. Un. It. n. 258, nomen 
(1840); in Flora, xxiv. Intell. Bl. 28, nomen (1841); in 
Flora, xxv. 2, 289 (1842); Boiss. in DC. Prod. xii. 695 (1848). 
a Patula Hochst. in ag aa 2, 289 (1848), sec. Oliv. l.¢ 
Plum ees egiandulosa R. B n Salt, Voy. App. iv. p. se, 
nomen (1814). 
Abyssinia: loc. vix cert., H. aes in Herb. Mus. Brit. in monte 
Scholoda, Schimper, 258! Athen es “Steiner, 1829! Eri- 
_threa, prope Acrour, Schweinfur i ‘é. Riva, 
- 4. Ceratostigma speciosum Prain. pa scandens, ramo- 
sus, ramis sparse foliatis, cortice haud fisso teretibus, ramulis 
subcylindricis densius adpresse fulvo-pubescentibus. Innovationes 
-basi squamis paucis, ovatis, coriaceis, vagineformibus, substrigosis, 
subito i = folia normalia abeuntibus obsite. Folia obovata, alterna, 
apice abrupte acuminata, mucronata, basi cuneata, margine spi- 
nuloso-setosa, pose minute adpresse or ich subtus ‘adpresse 
strigosa, 30-40. mm. longa, 15-25 mm. lata. Florum glomeruli 
terminales vel sabtertainalen Bractee lanceolate margine setoso- 
ciliate, gs ana strigose. Calyx dentibus pangentibus, 
18-20 mm 
Somalia: in syes at nemoribusque scandens, Dna. Lort —e 
Dna. ae a ge Hadrawal, A. Donaldson Smith! 
les C. abyssinico proxima; differt foliis latioribus, habit 
scan dont nte, tomento densiore, floribus manifeste majoribus, capitulis 
omnibus terminalibus subterminalibusve nullis plane axillaribus. 
NOTES ON THE FLORA OF SUSSEX.—II. 
By C. E. Satmon, F.L.S. 
Since the publication of ae Sussex list (Journ. Bot. 1901, 403), 
memoranda of various plants from that county have been steadily 
accumulating, and I ve arwsth to now record them ere they et 
ie ~— of hand. 
S. Marshall has alread 7 these pages So i 
and 1903, 227) contributed greatly to tr ar dion ; Wes 
Sussex plants, and Mr. W. Whitwell (he. e. 1002, 103) has sicihaned 
the Horsted Keynes district in East § 
As in my previous notes, I haye endeavoured to reject localities 
already in print and easily accessible; from one book, however,— 
and that a scarce bees it appears,—I have sdielces some extracts—The 
Botany of the County of Sussex, re Fy: i. Cooper, F.L.S., 1884. 
rnold’s pte "Flore (1887) makes use of many of Cooper’s 
