184 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
about 8 cm. long, the outer broader and slightly shorter ; corolla 
55 cm. long; stamens 4 cm. including the anthers (barely 
*5 cm.). 
The general resemblance to other species of Argyreia, such as 
the widespread A. tiliefolia, leads me to place this in the genus, 
in spite of absence of fruit. It is apparently near the Mozam- 
CuscUTA KILIMANJARI Oliver. Hitherto known only from the 
specimens collected by Johnston on Mount Kilimanjaro, at 6000 ft. 
elevation, this has been foun Swynnerton in Gazaland on 
th 
land which Mr. Swynnerton has now collected in Gazaland; the 
host of the Kilimanjaro specimens is another acanthaceous plant 
of very similar habit, Justecia flava Vahl. 
Other species worthy of record are :—Calonyction speciosum 
Choisy, from the Semliki For i 
Albert, near Neusi River (Bagshawe, 133 angustifolia, 
from shore of same lake near Waki River (Bagshawe, 1428) 
South Tropical Bolusiana Se , from ndon- 
rom e Albe 
Unyoro, no. 1593. 
MOSSES FROM THE CANARY ISLANDS. 
By H.N. Dixon, M.A., F.L.S. 
the bryological flora of these islands, as well as one or two plants 
of special interest, its contents appear worth putting on record. 
Three specimens were gathered on Teneriffe, viz., Bartramia 
stricta Brid., Hypnum cupressiforme L., and Grimmia azorica 
-& Card. The latter was not quite so well marked in its dif- 
