PLURITUBERCULATA. (Sarc.) ( 41) ONCIDIUM. 
Sir Wm. —— was misled by the assurance from Woburn, that the plant 
sent him from that fe Brazilian, at he Bsc misrepresentation 
which has foand its <a public out of that establishment. 
O. obsoletum, an unp soliahed 2? name of Galeotti’s, evidently belongs to some 
variety of this, at learn rom Prof. o the same acute observer is 
due the mre ar O. panduriferum is auties ng more than some common 
_ form of O. carthagine pei of var, sanguineum, judging from a flower 
with which he rd Plaxcared. ts 
* 131. 0. luridam. Lindl. in B. R. t. 727. 
( - bro eset: a Flowers olive-green, with dusky brown blotehes. | BM. 
® guttatom, Flowers dull yellow, spotted with CE B. R. 
5 pista um. Linn. sp. pl. 1351. 
Cymbidium guttatum. Willd. 4, 102. 
. Boyd, rt. 
O. cuneatum. Lindl. Coll. Bot. sub t. 
(C) atratum. pint wers dull olive, with a very dark brown whole-coloured 
lip. Hort. Soc, Journ., VI., c. ic. xyl. 
. Cat. 
(CD) intermedium. hiwen: dull “sid cenged = cireular brown spots. 
hase sf narrow, with rigid flexuose branc 
O. intermedium. Knowles and Westcott Fl. “Cab. t. 60, bad. 
(E) Morreni, Flowers pale rose- — spotted with etait and tipped 
with yellow. Lip cinnamon-b 
O. cosymbephorum. prime Ann. aust t. 275. 
Wild in Trortcat America; A, Martini ee Trinidad, 
—Hooker ; Meaiaes Aedes (Behb.) ; soy a — Hort 
C, Mexico, near Tampico—Hartweg ik Cu UBA, 
on the Sierra Maestre, at the each of 5000 ft —Linden, (v. 
v. ¢. et 8 
inore varieties might | be enumerated, were it _desirable—for this 
viden 
of its parts, t the column and co lumn-wings, and also in the crest, with the 
exception that in o which may be a distinct species, an additional tubercle 
wo appears on the outside of the others. 
* 132. 0. hematochilum. indi. in Paxt. Fl. Gard. t. 6. 
Wild in New Grexapa—Loddiges, (v. v. ¢.) 
Intermediate as it were between O. Lanceanum and luvidum. Sepals an 
petals — mottled with crimson. Lip crimson mottled with white, Poa 
masses and appendages those of 0. lwridum. 
* 133. 0. Lanceanum. Lindl. in Hort. Trans. n. s., 1.100, 
fT. Bo Rep. zt. 1887. 
Wild in Surryam—Lance, Regel 1786, Hostmann 342, (2. v. ¢. 
et 8. sp.) 
This beautiful ul plant seems confined to Surinam. ae sepals and petals 
are greenish richly mottled with brown ; ra lip rose-colour, deep violet on the 
lower half. The flowers rb go to e Vanilla, and vary in in the de lepth of 
1 
colour; b 
