Lefebvrea| LXVIIL UMBELLIFERAE, 431 
2, L. angolensis Welw. ex Ficalho in Bol. Soc. Geogr. Lisb., Ser. 2, 
p. 712 (6 April 1882) (Lefeburria); Ficalho, Pl. Uteis, p. 192 (1884). 
Alwardia (sp.), Welw. Apont. p. 590, n. 92. Lefeburia Wel- 
witschit Eng]. Hochgebirgsfl. p, 322 (1892). 
Gotunco AtTo.—A herb, 3 to 5, rarely 6, ft. high, varying from 
annual to triennial, with the aroma of turpentine; stem erect, cylindrical, 
rather obtusely angular, filled with a white pith, spotted with purple 
below, especially at the origin of the branches, branched from the 
base ; lower branches erect-patent, very long (4 to 5 ft.), slender, 
distant, the upper ones approximated ; leaves broad, semi-amplexicaul, 
very variable in shape, sometimes pellucid-punctate ; bracts of the 
involucels several, lanceolate, much acuminate, membranous on the 
margin ; flowers from greenish to yellowish, polygamous ; calyx-teeth 
scarcely conspicuous ; petals ovate-orbicular, broadly subcordate at the 
base, sessile, apical acumen obtuse, inflexed or subemarginate ; stylopod 
depresso-conical, with several small lobes on the deflexed margin, 
inserted in the deep sinus between the prolonged wings of the fruit ; 
styles short, incurved, elongating, deflexed in fruit ; primary ridges on 
the carpels 3; vittz broad ; a secondary ridge on each side of the 
primary ones undulated, vittate within. In the damp shady primitive 
forests of Mata de Quisucula, especially along streams, near Bango 
Aquitamba ; fl. and young fr. May; fr. June 1856. Negro name 
“Calusange caféle” (small calusange). In Mata de Alto Queta, 
young fl. beginning of April 1856. No. 2522. An annual or biennial 
herb, 2 to 4 ft. or more, with the habit and mode of growth of Carwm 
Petroselinum, very resinous; flowers turning yellowish, small, rather 
fleshy, not dicecious ; calyx-limb tumid on the margin, without teeth ; 
petals ovate, concave, greenish, scarcely patent even during flowering, 
mostly scarious at the apex. Young root tuberous. In shady places 
in the primitive forests of Alto Queta and in deep hollows at Quibanga; 
fl. and fr. April and May 1856. No. 2522). An annual herb; root 
long, fusiform : stem 3 to 4 ft. high, erect, purplish ; leaves herbaceous- 
green ; flowers apparently yellowish. In the primitive forest of 
Quisucula, rather rare; fr. 8 Sept. 1855. Coit. Carp. 627. Herba- 
ceous. In primitive forests by streams; fr. July 1857. Co. Carp. 
629. A herb, 3 to 5 ft. high, branched above; leaves compound ; 
flowers yellowish. In the moist primitive forest of Quisucula near 
streams, at Cungulungulo ; fr. July 1858. Negro name ‘‘Calusange 
oféle.” Cont. Carp. 630. 
Pungo AnponGco.—A herb, 3 ft. high, apparently biennial or 
perhaps perennial, with yellowish flowers. In rocky thickets at the 
banks of streams near Catete ; fl. and young fr. Feb. 1857. No. 2523. 
An erect, annual biennial or perennial herb, 2 to 4 ft. high, with the 
habit of parsley ; stems purplish ; leaves decompound, ternato-partite ; 
ultimate segments of the radical leaves broad and oval, of the stem- 
leaves narrower obcuneate, all acutely dentate ; flowers yellowish or 
greenish-yellowish ; petals greenish-yellow, bordered with purple, not 
appendaged, shorter than the stamens. In damp secondary thickets 
near the stream Tangue within the fortified lines of Pungo Andongo ; 
fl. middle and end of (22, 29 and 30) Jan. 1857. No. 25280. 
Coty. Carp. 94 consists of ripe fruits of a much branched annual 
umbellifer, 4 to 6 ft. high with compound leaves ; they were grown in 
Senhor Kneissman’s garden in Huilla in May 1860, and appear to 
belong to this genus and either to this or the previous species. 
