224 EUPHOEBIACBAE. 



5. Croton lucidus L. Syst. ed. 10, 1275. 1759. 



Crotoii Hjalmarsonii Griseb. Fl. Br. W. I. 40. 1859. 



Croton lucidus puiigerus Griseb. loc. cit. 1859. 



A broad shrub 1.5-2 m. Mgh; brancMets glabrous or glabrescent. Leaves 

 elliptic to oblong-lanceolate, 5-15 cm. long, 2-4 cm. wide, glabrous or pubes- 

 cent, minutely pellucid-punctate, entire, narrowing to a roundish base and apex; 

 petiole about one-fourth the length of the blade; stipules ephemeral. Inflores- 

 cence in terminal racemes. Male flowers: sepals ovate, imbricative, much 

 smaller than those of the female, ciliate on the margin; female flowers: calyx- 

 lobes oblong, blunt, margin reduplicate, somewhat persistent at the base; 

 styles 4-partite, the branches bifld to near the base. Seeds ovoid-oblong, shin- 

 ing, flattish on the ventrum, the dorsum convex. 



Rocky thickets and openings, throughout the archipelcfgo from Great Sturrup 

 Cay south to Grand Turk Island : — Cuba ; Porto Rico ; Jamaica and the Caymans. 

 Croton glabellum of Schcepf. Fieb-bush. 



An examination of the type, and many specimens, indicates that O. Hjalmarsonii 

 is but a race of this species which develops many interspersing races, differing in 

 the size of the leaves and in pubescence, both in Jamaica and in the Bahamas. 



6. Croton bahamensis Millsp. Field Mus. Bot. 2: 308. 1909. 



A shrub 1-2 m. high with a peppery odor; branchlets white stellate- 

 tomentose. Leaves lanceolate, 3-7 cm. long, 7-17 mm. broad, acuminate, 

 mucronate, base slightly oblique and rounded, with 2 patellate glands, green 

 above and equidistantly stellate-pubescent, densely stellate-pubescent beneath, 

 the margin subentire or crenate-dentate with stipitate glands in the sinuses; 

 stipules fimbriate and stipitate-glandular. Inflorescence in dense terminal 

 racemes. Female flowers: calyx-segments oblong, stellate-pilose; styles 4-fld 

 to the base and villous with moniliform hairs. Male flowers: esilyx non- 

 glandulif erous ; petals white, cymbiform, the apex minutely fimbriate; stamens 

 35-50. Capsule globose, deeply sulcate, glabrous below but long-pilose in the 

 sulci and at the apex; seeds brownish black, the rugae rib-like. 



Open pastures and in thickets bordering openings, Eleuthera and Long Island 

 to Mariguana. Endemic. Referred to in Field Mus. Bot. 2 : 153, and by Hitchcock 

 as C, humilis L. ; by Grisebach and by Dolley as G. humilis origanifolius. Bahama 

 Ceotox. Peppbk-eush. 



7. Croton lobatus L. Sp. PI. 1005. 1753. 



A low herb, 3-6 dm. high, the branches and branchlets pilose, the longer 

 hairs simple. Leaves membranous, 3-5-lobed, glabrous, papillate, the segments 

 elliptic to elliptic-lanceolate, acuminate, serrate; petioles nearly as long as the 

 blades. Female flowers: calyx-lobes spathulate-lanceolate, glanduliferous and 

 with a few long aeicular hairs; styles free or nearly so, 3-8-fld at the apex. 

 Male flowers: sepals glabrous; petals lanceolate. Capsule globose-ellipsoid, the 

 cocci with a number of scattered aeicular hairs; seeds ochre-color, quadrangular- 

 cylindric, 5 mm. long, 3 mm. broad, the dorsum apiculate at the caruncle, all the 

 facets marked by dnoomplete and more -or less transverse ridges. 



Adventitious in waste places. New Providence, near Nassau : — West Indies : con- 

 tinental tropical America. IjOEEU Choton. 



Schoepf's record of Croton argenteum L., as Bahamian, is, presumably, erro- 

 neous. 



9. CUKCAS Adans. Fam. PI. 2: 356. 1763. 

 Glabrous or nearly glabrous trees or shrubs with petioled, lobed or entire 

 leaves, and monoecious flowers in compound or simple cymes. Calyx 5-lobed or 

 5-parted. Corolla gamopetalous, the petals united to or above the middle. 

 Stamens about 10, in 2 series. Ovary 2-3-celled; ovules 1 in each cavity. 

 Fruit a capsule, splitting into 2 or 3 valves. [Malabar name.] Perhaps 10 

 species, natives of tropical regions, the following typical. 



