162 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
T. Morong”’; but these are sides tedly pulcher, as named. 
z, wane R. Philippi! Fl. ae eae 50 (1860). 
P. aulacophyllus K. Schum. in FI. Bras. iii. 3, 696 (1894). 
Dr. Graebner ea my ldanlifionicn of Schumann’s plant 
(see Journ. Bot. 1895, 374) with P. strictus. Its recorded stations 
are few. Desert of Atacanite. N. Chili, Philippi! Cordillera de la 
Rioja, Argentina, Hieronymus and Niedelei, n. 226! Lac de 
am aragua 
Lius A. he rner in Verh.-zool.-bot. Ges. Wien, xlv, 
364 (st), and Flor, Fl. Austr.-Hung. n 
‘ond, rege Point, Prince Edward’ s Island, Canada, 
1888, No. ne J. Maco 
fruit style place it with filiformis Pers., vaginatus Turez., 
eoblgopielins C. A. Meyer, and strictus Phil.; Baa, aagoe places here 
his P. pamiricus, described in Vid. Medd. N at. For. 1903, 182. 
x P. concinnitus nov. hybr. (crispus x pusillus 
In looking over specimens of crispus from Eur uropean stein 
I found one labelled: “ Growing with Suiilins forma, 7, 6, 1 
Beéva bei Lasky, Moravia, leg. J. Bubela ex herb. Polak.” 
is is near the plant described as x Bennettii (crispus x ob- 
one sie ?) by Mr. Fryer, me differs in the structure of the pated 
an e apex of the leave ing more acute; the same minute 
oat occur at or near the base of the leaves. It is probably 
crispus x pusillus. It differs from crispus in the entire, more 
crisped or wavy margins of the a with fewer cross-nerves 
from pusillus in the leaves being shorter and broader, with sis 
central nerve crispus-like in structure 
