1877.] Knoioledge of tliG Biirmese Flora. 205 



X X Leaves more or less cordate at the base, the petiole not winged. 



Flowering stem leaved, the leaves thin membranous, sinuate-toothed, long-petioled, 

 sparingly pilose or almost glabrous ; flower-heads sessile, or pedunclcd, in racemes 

 or panicles, A. aptcra. 



Flowering stem radical and almost scapiform and leafless ; leaves almost coriaceous, 

 entire, hirsute, often glabrcsccnt above, densely villous-fringed ; flower-heads 

 peduncled, in difi'use panicles, A. Brandisiana. 



1. A. PTEEOPODA, DC. Prod. VII. 14 ; Clark. Comp. Ind. 246. 

 Var. a. GENUINA {A. pteropoda (3. lohelioides, Clark. Comp. Ind. 246 ; 



A. pteropoda^ DC. I. c. ; A. Silhetensis, Clark, in Linn. Journ. XIV. 411), 

 flower-heads sessile, usually clustered, forming a simple elongate lax spike. 



Var, (3. EFFUSA, Clark. 1. c., flower-heads slenderly peduncled, almost 

 racemose, forming a spreading narrow panicle. 



Hab. Var. a. frequent in open grassy places of the drier hill-, espe- 

 cially the pine-forests, and on the hill-pastures of the higher ridges of the 

 Martaban hills, at 5000 — 7100 ft. elevation j Upper Tenasserim, top of Moo- 

 lee (Eev. Parish).— Fl. Fr. March. 



2. A. BiiAm)isiA]S'A, Kurz in Journ. As. Soc. Beng. 1872. 318 ; 

 Clark. Comp. Ind. 247. 



Hab. Not unfrequent along choungs in the damp HU-forests of the 

 Martaban hills, at 2000—4000 ft. elevation.— Fl. March. 



Gerbera, Gron. 



1. a. PiLOSELLOiDES, Cass. Dict. XVIII. 461 ; DC. Prod. VII. 16 ; 

 Bth. Fl. Hongk. 191. {Arnica piloselloides, Linn. Amoen. VI. 103 ; G. 

 ovalifolia, DC. Prod. VII. 17 ; Clark. Comp. Ind. 249). 



Hab. Karenee hills (Rev. F. Mason.) 



The Cape-plant grows on sand-hills and has larger flower-heads and 

 shorter, more robust scapes. 



Ciehorium, L. 



*1. C. Inttbus, L. sp. pi. 1142 ; Engl. Bot. t. 539 ; DC. Prod. VII. 

 84 J Koch Syn. Fl. Germ. 357 ; Clark. Comp. Ind. 250. 



Var. a. genfina, floral leaves from a broader half- stem- clasping base, 

 lanceolate, the lower leaves often runcinate. 



Var. /8. Endivia, Clark. Comp. Ind. 250. {C. Endivia, L. sp. pi. 

 1142; DC. Prod. VII. 84; Koch Syn. Fl. Germ. 357), flm^al leaves broad- 

 ly ovate, half- stem-clasping with a cordate base, the lower leaves usually 

 only sinuate. 



Hab. Var. p. cultivated in gardens of the drier parts of Burma, as 

 Prome.— Fl. CS. 



Crepis, L. 



1. C. Japonica, Bth. Fl. Hongk. 194. (Frenantlies Japonica, L. 

 Mant. 107 ; Thbg. Fl. Jap. 302 ; Youngia Japonica, DC. Prod. VII. 194 ; 



