576 ADDITIONS AND COEEECTIONS. 



P. 216. Parrotia Jacqv/ermmtiana. In Kunawar near Shoang at 9000 ft. — 

 Vern. Shd. 



P. 219. Line 12 from below, lead " nwlabarica" and " parviflora." 



P. 221. GowJtyrdum decandrum. Burma, S. Kurz. 



P. 223. S. Kurz makes Pangah, Burm., a distinct and new species, T. tomen- 

 tdla, marked by a glabrous smooth calyx-tube, smaller fruit, and more copious 

 cupreous pubescence. 



P. 226. For an account of the Tusseh silkworm (Fhaliena Pwphia), which 

 lives on the leaves of Terminalia tomentosa and Zizyphus Jujvba in Behar, 

 see Roxb. in Trans. Linn. Soc. vii. 33. 



P. 246. According to another account, the Prickly Pear was destroyed in 

 1849-50 in the Jalandhar district. The insect was collected largely by the 

 cloth-dyers, and yielded a brilliant colour. 



P. 255. According to Dr Stewart, Lonicera migustifolia is common in Zans- 

 kar, Ladak, Nubra, ascending to 15,000 ft. — Notes of a Bot. Tour in Western 

 Tibet, Trans. Bot. Soc. Edin. 1869, p. 207. Is this not L. spinosa, Jacquem. ? 

 L. glauca, H. f. & Th. Joum. Linn. Soc. ii. 166, a small shrub, with linear- 

 oblong obtuse leaves, glaucous beneath, and large ovate-oblong ciliate bracts, 

 common in Zanskar, Piti, Nubra, Pangong lake, Tibet, 13,000-16,000 ft. 



P. 258. Madden (As. Soc. Joum. xviii. i. 609) gives the following additional 

 vem. names for some of the Yibwmums of the N/W. Himalaya : 1. V. cotini- 

 folium (black fruit), Gv/ya, Kamaon. 2. V. Mullaha, Hamilton in Don's Prodr. 

 Fl. Nep. 141, which name, being older, should take precedence of V. stellvla- 

 tum, wall., with abundant red, bitter fruit. Eri, Simla. 3. V. foetens, De- 

 caisne. Guya, Kamaon ; Thelain, Bussahir. 



P. 260. Samhucus adnata, WalL ; H. f. & Th. in Journ. Linn. Soc. ii. 180, is 

 an undershrub with furrowed branches and red berries of Sikkim (6000-11,000 

 ft.) Nepal, and, according to Eoyle lU. 236, on the mountains of Kashmir (?) 



P. 269. A species, nearly allied to Wendlandia tinctoria, is W. puherula, DC. 

 Prodr. iv. 412. Leaves with less prominent lateral nerves, and long hairs, par- 

 ticularly along midrib and nerves. Corolla-tube funnel-shaped (not tubular, as 

 in W. tinctona), twice or barely twice the length of segments. Anthers linear 

 (not elliptic, as in W. tinctoria). Common in Kamaon and Garhwal, ascending 

 to 4000 ft. Nepal. 



P. 282. Ehod. Anthopogon. — Vem. Talsir, Bussahir. Sans. Talisa palra 

 (Madden). 



P. 299. Symplocos ramosissima (nervosa), of Madden Joum. As. Soc. xviii. i. 

 625, is " evergreen, with beautifully glossy leaves, common on the north sida 

 of the Gagar Pass, and in similar shady places on Binsar, Bura Pinnath, and 

 Panjok Khal in Garhwal, from 6000-8000 ft." 



P. 303. Fraxinus excelsior, Linn. — Ash. Esclie, German ; Frene, French. 

 Weight 34-52 lb., according to Dr Hurst's edition of Tredgold, 454 (1871). 

 NordUnger's data correspond to 35-58 lb. 



P. 304. In Kimawar F. Moorcroftiana is found as far as Spui on the right, 

 and Namgia on the left bank. 



P. 305. Schrehera swietenioides. — Vem. Gharii, ghanta (not ghavi), patcdi, 

 ghanta paraii {Bell Bignonia), Bandelkhand. 



P. 307. The name Oleaferruginm, Royle, ought to take precedence of 0. cus- 

 pidata of WaUich's Catalogue, being supported by description and figure. 



P. 310. Zigustrum compactum, common by brooks in the warmer valleys ot 

 Kamaon and Kyuntal near Simla, has a very bitter leaf. — Madden. As. Soc. 

 Journ. xviiu i. 633. 



P. 318. Buddleiapanicwlata — Vem. Dusheria; ascends to 7500 ft. in Kamaon 

 (Madden). 



P. 334. Pergularia pallida, Kosilla at 4000 ft. (Madden). 



