436 Lxxx. CAMPANDLACE^. (0. B. Clarke.) ICampammicBa. 



ovary; lobes ^-| by ^ in., ovate-lanceolate, approximat«, glabrous. Corolla |-li by 

 i-1 in., lurid yellow with purple veins. Ovary 5-4- (rarely 3-) celled. Berry jt-l 

 in. diara., hemispheric, broader than long, glaucous, black-purple, the persistent 

 somewhat enlarged calyx-lobes spreading from near its base. — Oodonopsis cordata 

 (Hassk. in Eetzia, i. 9) may be only a var. of this, as Kurz states ; but Hasskarl's 

 examples differ in the leaves being sparsely hairy above with much spreading hairs on 

 the nerves beneath, a state unknown in India. 



2. C> Inflata, Clarke; leaves ovate-cordate nearly glabrous, calyx adnate 

 nearly to the summit of the ellipsoid berry. Codonopsis inflata, Sooh f. III. 

 Him. PI. t. 16, C. ; H.f.^ T. in Joum. Linn. Sac. ii. 13. 



SiKKiM and Bhotan ; alt. 5-8000 ft., common. 



Leaves alternate sometimes opposite, 3 by If in., acute, deeply cordate, entire or 

 crenate-dentate, glaucous beneath, glabrous or sparsely pilose above ; petiole J-2 in. 

 Peduncles mostly leaf-opposed, as long as the petioles. Calyx-lobes J-f by J in., 

 ovate-lanceolate, approximate, glabrous or nearly so. Corolla 1^ by | in., lurid 

 yellow with purple veins. Ovary 3-celled. Berry f-J in., cylindric from a hemi- 

 spheric base, usually at least as long as broad, glaucous, black-purple, crowned by a 

 flat pentagonal disc. 



Sect. II. Cyclocodon (Gen. GriffitK). Perennial, erect herlw, with 

 long spreading branches. Leaves opposite. Inflorescernjce terminal. Calyx-lobes 

 narrow. CoroUa small, with a very short tube, white. Seeds ovoid, testa not 

 reticulated. 



3. C. celebicai Blume Bijd. 727 ; leaves short-petioled lanceolate serrate, 

 calyx-tube adnate to the 5-celled ovary. 0. truncata, Endl. Gen. Plant, i. 515. 

 Codonopsis truncata, Wall. Cat. 1301 ; DC. I*rodr. vii. 423, 0. celebica and 

 leucocarpa,.ilfig'. Fl. Ind. Bat. ii. 565, 566. 0. albiflora, Griff. Notul. iv. 279. 

 Cyclocodon lancifolium, Kurz in Flora, 1872, 303,a«(Z in Joum. As. Soc. 1877, 

 iii 210, partly. 0. truncatum, H. f. 8r T. in Joum. Linn. iSoc. ii. 18. 0. adnatus, 

 Gri^. ; Benth. in Gen. PI. ii. 658. Campanula lancifolia, Boxb. Fl. Ind. i. 

 505; A. DC. Prodr. vii. 485. 



SncKiM Himalaya; alt. 4-6000 ft., frequent. Chittagokg and Bibma; alt. 

 0-3000 ft., frequent.^DiSTKiB. Malaya, Ava, S. China. 



Erect, 3-4 ft. high with horizontal long and drooping branches. Leaves 3 by 1 in., 

 "base cuneate or rounded, teeth sometimes obscure, glabrous or with scattered hairs, 

 often glaucous beneath ; petiole ^-^ in. Flowers solitary, terminal, and in the forks 

 of a dichotomous cyme-; peduncle ^ in. Calyx in bud very shortly adnate to the ovary, 

 in fruit adnate shortly or half way up, sometimes nearly to the base of the corolla; 

 teeth ^^ in., linear-lanceolate, usually serrate. Corolla J-^ by \ in., epigynous, 

 very shortly campanulate, white, fading somewhat into yellow, but not at all lurid 

 glaucous as in sect. Eucampanumea. Ovary 5-6-celled. Berry J in. diam., globose, 

 white, little succulent, ultimately dry and breaking up irregularly. — The Amoy 

 species admitted by Bentham (Gen. PI. ii. 558) as having a 6-merous corolla, does not 

 differ from the 6-merous Pegu plant. 



4. C. parviflora, Benth. in Gen. PL ii. 658; leaves shortly petioled lan- 

 ceolate caudate-serrate, calyx free from the 4-celled ovary. Codonopsis parvi- 

 flora, Wall. Cat. 1300 ; BC. Prodr. vii. 423. Cyclocodon distans, Gi-iff. Notvl. 

 iy. 277 ; Ic. PI. Asiat. t. 481. 0. parviflorum, H.f. ^ T. in Joum. Linn. Soc. 

 ii. 18 (exclud. si/n. Oailipaniimsea celebica). C. lancifolium, Kurz in Journ. As. 

 Soc. 1877, ii. 210, partly. 



SiKKiM, Bhotan and Khasia Mts. ; alt. 1-6000 ft., common. 



Closely resembling C. celebica, and united with it by Kurz, but the calyx is 

 entirely free, and \-^ in. below the fruit. This degree of adherence of the calyx is, 

 however, so very variable in C. celebica, that Kurz does not distinguish this species by 



