490 LXIX. RUBIACEA. [Coffea 
loosely investing the cotyledons, quite smooth. In moist forests, often 
in company with C. arabica, at the banks of the river Delamboa ; ripe 
fr. July 1855. Co, Carp. 651. Matade Cacarambola ; seeds August 
1855. Cov. Carp. 652. Berries didymous-round, black-purple. In 
forests near Morro de Cacarambola, in company with palms ; seeds 
July 1855. Couy. Carp. 653. 
CazENGO.—Berries when ripe as large as a good-sized pea, somewhat 
didymous, very black with a very slight redness, 1 or 2-seeded ; near 
the river Delamboa; nearly ripe fr. June 1856. Also in GoLUNGO 
Aro. No. 3178. 
4. C. hypoglauca Welw. ex Hiern in Trans. Linn. Soc., Ser. 2, 
i. p. 173, and in Oliv. Fl. Trop. Afr. iii. p. 183 ; Ficalho, l.c., p. 205. 
Pungo ANDONGO.—A small tree, 15 to 20 ft. high ; head lax ; 
branches quite patent ; leaves thinly coriaceous, shining, glaucous 
beneath. In wooded situations near Catete, Baranco grande in Sobato 
de Catete ; unripe fr. Dec. 1856. No. 3174. A tree of 15 ft. or more, 
with the habit precisely of C. arabica ; trunk 2} ft. (?) in diameter at 
the base ; branches patent ; leaves few-nerved and glaucous beneath ; 
unripe berries green, as large as a small-sized pea. In shady forests 
between Catete and Pedra Pungo ; unripe fr. Feb. 1857. No. 3175. 
A small tree, 8 ft. high, with the habit of C. arabica; trunk straiyht, 
slender ; berry 2-celled and 2-seeded or in some cases 1-celled and 
i-seeded the septum and the second seed being abortive ; seeds 
furrowed on the face (or according to Welwitsch flat and without a 
furrow on the face in the case of a nearly ripe fruit). In wooded 
places near Catete at the river Tangue, wild ; nearly ripe fr. May 1857, 
No. 3176. 
5. C. jasminoides Welw. ex Hiern in Trans. Linn, Soc., ser. 2, 
i, p. 175, and in Oliv. Fl. Trop. Afr. iii. p. 185 ; Ficalho, dc, p. 205. 
GoLtunco ALtto.—A_ sarmentose twisted shrub ; flowers precocious, 
snow-white, subpendulous, very sweetly fragrant. In very shady 
forests on the right-hand side of the road leading from Ponte de Luiz 
Simoes, towards Camilungo ; with leaves without fl., and fl. without 
leaves, Dec. 1854. No. 3169. Ponte do Felix Simdes, Camilungo ; 
with leaves and fr. beginning of June 1856. No. 3170. Flowers 
white, a little purplish, very fragrant; corolla hexamerous and 
pentamerous. Ponte de Felix Simées ; fl. without foliage, Jan. 1855. 
No. 3171. A shrub, 3 to 5 ft. high, erect but with the branches more 
or less sarmentose, leafless at the time of flowering, very much 
branched ; branches decussate, spreading horizontally ; habit of a 
Jasminum, which it resembles also in the shape and the very pleasant 
fragrance of its flowers ; calyx relatively small, completely hidden by 
bracts, investing the ovary, urceolate ; the limb erect, crenate-lobed ; 
the lobes 7 or 8, short, broad, rather rigidly membranous, rounded- 
obtuse at the apex ; corolla funnel-shaped, salver-shaped, white, usually 
rosy-red outside ; the tube slender, sub-cylindrical, equal, about an 
inch long, naked inside; the limb spreading, 6- or 7- or very rarely 
5-partite ; the segments oblong, rather obtuse, erect-patent ; stamens 
equal in number to the corolla-lobes or very rarely 8, inserted a little 
below the throat of the corolla, included ; anthers incumbent but 
erect on account of the shortness of the filaments, attached by the 
middle to the very short filaments ; style deeply bifid at the apex, 
with spreading thick lanceolate-spathulate obtuse lobes stigmatose on 
the inner side. In the densest thickets of forests, with its ultimate 
branches quasi-scandent among neighbouring shrubs, near Camilungo 
