64 S. Kurz — On Indian Plants. [No. 1, 



lineares ; stylus filamentaque glaberrima ; baccse...— Karen-hills 

 E. of Tounghoo, On Taipo mountains, at 3000 feet elevation. (Dr. 

 Brandis). 



67. Loranthus eleutheropetalus, n. sp. 



Erutex parasiticus, glaberrimus ; folia opposita v. subopposita, 

 lanceolata ad elliptica et lineari-lanceolata, obtusa v. magis minusve 

 obtuse acuminata, basi in petiolum \-\ poll, longum attenuata, inte- 

 gra, crasse coriacea et enervia, glabra, viridia ; fibres (coccinei?), 

 glabri, c. 1£ poll, longi, pedicellis 2-2 \ lin. longis, patentibus, in ra- 

 cemos terminales et axillares laxissimos elongates, ssepe 3-4 poll, lon- 

 gos,minute puberulos,mox glabrescentes,dispositi; bractealato cucul- 

 lato-oblonga, obliqua, parviuscula ; bracteolee nulla? ; calyx subtilissi- 

 me puberulus, mox glabrescens, tubo cylindrico 2-2 £ lin. longo, limbo 

 truncato ; corolla 6-petala, petalis in alabastro coberentibus dein 

 liberis, anguste linearibus, 1^ poll, longis, erecto -patentibus et su- 

 pra basin reflexis ; filamenta et stylus angulatus glabri ; antherse 

 elongate -linearis, acuminata3. — Pym Kyoung (Pywoon Clioung ? 

 in Pegu ? or in Martaban ?). (Dr. Brandis). 



68. Viscum Helfeei, Prsl. (Epim. Bot. 256) is Ginalloa Helferi. 

 The species of the genus Ginalloa appear to have all a curious 

 sheath-like thickening at the base of each joint, by which they 

 are easily recognised. G. spathulifolia, Oliv. (V. spathulifolium, 

 Thw.) appears to differ from G. Helferi only by narrower 3-nerved 

 leaves. Another species of Ginalloa will be the Viscum from the 

 Andamans, which I have incorrectly compared with V. heteranthicm, 

 "Wall. Wallichs species is referred by Meissner to Henslowia. 



69. Viscum moniliformb, WA. (Prod., I, 380, non Bl. ; Wight 

 Icon., t. 1018 et 1019). This species is (to judge from the citations 

 of Wight's figures) referred by Mr. Bentham to V. articulatwm, 

 Burm., but I think the two differ from each other in structure, as 

 well as in general habit. 



V. articulatum, Burm. Articles slightly narrowed at the joints 

 and not conspicuously dilated, longitudinally ribbed, each article 

 placed at a right angle with the other and, therefore, decussately 

 crossing each other, but twisted so as to appear in one plane. Those 

 of the main branches, however, are in one plane as in the following. 



