176 cxLvm, OROHIDEM. (J. D. Hooker.) [Neuwiedia. 



peduncle short, raceme short many-fld. and flowers pubescent, bracts 

 5-J in. erect. 



PENANff; on West Hill, alt. 2000 ft., Curtis. — Disteib. Sumatra. 

 Leaves as in N. Lindleyi, but peduncle and raceme very short, and bracts 

 glandular-pubescent. 



3. XT. Griffithii, Seichb. f. Xen. Orchid, ii. 215; peduncle short, 

 spike short many-fld. and flowers subhispidly pubescent, bracts |-f in. 



Malacca, Griffith, Maingay {Kew Distrib. 1682). Pbeae, King's Collector. 



Stem very short. Leaves 4-10 in., elliptic-lanceolate, finely acuminate, many- 

 nerved, petioled. Saceme 2-3 in. ; flowers white, very shortly pedicelled, i in. long, 

 decnrved. Capsule ^ in. long, turgid, trigonous. 



SUPPLEMENT TO ORCKXDEH:, WITH ADDITIONS AND 

 CORBECTIONS. 



During the elaboration of the Orchidece for this Flora, very large collections of 

 species, from many parts of India, were being received at intervals by the Herbarium 

 of the Royal Gardens, Kew, especially from the rich stores of the Royal Gardens of 

 Calcutta, together with the loan of a magnificent series of original drawings of Orchids 

 from the same source. The most important of these collections were Malayan, abouud- 

 jng in novelties, from Penang, Perak, Singapore and Malacca, made by the late Father 

 Scortechini (presented, together with the loan of the Rev. father's pencil drawings 

 of many species, by the Government of Perak), by Kunstler, a collector sent from 

 the Calcutta Bot. Gardens by Dr. King, by Curtis, Hullett, Wray and Ridley. 

 Important collections were also sent by Mann, from Assam, Bhotan, and the Khasia 

 hills ; by Gamble (on loan) from various parts of India ; by Duthie from Garwhal ; 

 by Clarke from Sikkim, the Khasia hills, and Bengal, together with a few from 

 Central India; and (on loan) by Dr. Trimen from Ceylon. These successive arrivals 

 necessitated many consecutive revisions and emendations of the work already pre- 

 pared, some printed, some in the press, and some in mss., besides adding many 

 species and some genera to the Indian Flora, 



Vol. V. p. 667. Ket to the TeibeS and Subteibes. 



The Key to the Indian Genera Suhtribes and Tribes was extracted, with a few 

 modifications, from that prepared by Bentham for the Genera Plantarum ; which, 

 whether as regards the difiiculties that attend the analysis of the plants of 

 this most complicated Order, or the chaotic state into which the family bad fallen 

 since Lindley's days, is a masterpiece of research and scientific taxonomy. As may 

 be supposed, the detailed examination of so many Indian genera and species as are 

 contained in this Flora (about 1400), and of a large proportion of which Bentham had 

 no knowledge, or only a superficial one, has suggested a few emendations in his 

 classification, but these are very slight, and I shall notice them in their order, in the 

 following pages. 



Sub-order Maiaxe^;. I have departed from Bentham, in including Lipabieje 

 and Malaxeje nnder one sub-order. The essential character of Lipariece, the 

 incumbent anther, fails in a great measure when Oleronia is placed in it, for the 

 poUinia of this genus are as Griffith points out (Notul. iii. 273) in 0. anthropophora 

 and trilolata (ensiformis, Lindl.) at first accumbent ; and in these and othei-s he 

 describes them as " accumbenti-incumbentia." Added to this the habit of Micro- 

 stylis, which is placed in Malaiaece, is that of Liparis ; and of Oberonia, wbich is 

 placed in Lipariece, is that of Malaxis. The clinandrium is so minute in Oleronia 

 and Micfostylis, that I Ijave little confidence in my own results obtained by softening 

 these parts in dried specimens, but my impression is that in Microstylis the anther 

 will be found to both accumbent and incumbent, very much as in Oberonia. Lastly 

 the pollinia of Oleronia are variously described and figured as 2 or 4. I think 



