270 vebbenacEjB. , [Calliearpa. 



tawny wool iateiiiaixed with copious spreading hairs. Leaves from oblong to 

 ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, 5 to 8 in. long, wrinkled and minutely hoary 

 above, flqccose-oottony underneath. Cymes dictotomous ; the short branches 

 terminating in dense globular hirsute heads. Bracts subulate, as long as the 

 calyx. Calyx-teeth subtilate, much longer than the tube. Corolla hairy out- 

 side. Stamens much longer than the coroUa, with small anthers. — 0. Rox- 

 burghii, Schau. in DC. Prod. xi. 640, but not C. incana, B,oxb. 



Common in ravines. Champion and others. Also about Canton, but not known cut of 

 • south Chirfa. 



3. C. macrophylla, FaM, Symb. m. 13, t. 53; Schau. in DO. Prod. xi. 

 644. A tall shrub, with the foliage nearly of the last, but very different in 

 inflorescence and calyx. Branches and petioles thickly clothed with a floccose 

 wool, but without long hairs. Leaves oblong, lanceolate or rarely ovate-lan- 

 ceolate, acuminate, erenately toothed, 6 to 10 in. long, wrinkled and nearly 

 glabrous above, floccose-cottony or wooUy underneath. Cymes much branched, 

 with veiy niimerous small flowers, all distinct. Bracts small, linear. Calyx 

 •hairy, truncate; the nerves protruding into minute or sometimes linear teeth, 

 but always much shorter than the tube. Corolla slightly pubescent. Stamens 

 much exserted. — F. incana, Eoxb. Fl. Ind. i. 393.* 



Hongkong, Seemamt, Wright ; also on the adjacent continent, and frequent in northern 

 and eastern India. 



3. C. integerrima, Champ, in Kew Journ. Bot. v. 135. A shrub of 8 or 

 10 ft,, the branches petioles and inflorescence clothed with a dense floccose 

 yellowish tomentum or wool. Leaves fi'om broadly ovate to nearly oblong, 

 shortly acuminate, 4 to 6 in. long, quite entire, glabrous or nearly so above, 

 densely tomentose.or woolly. underneath. Cymes loose, with very numerous 

 small flowers. Calyx tomentose, truncate or sinuately toothed. Corolla gla- 

 "brous. Anthers small, the iilaments much exserted. 



Common in Hongkong, Champion, Hance, Wright. Also on the adjacent continent, but 

 not known out of S. China. It comes nearest to the C. Wallichiana from the Himalaya, but 

 that has much larger flowers, with large oblong anthers on short filaments. 



4. C. Reevesii, Wall.; Schau. in DO. Prod. v. 641. A shi-ub, the 

 branches, petioles, and inflorescence covered with a short close mealy tomentum. 

 Leaves oval-oblong, acute or acuminate, 5 to 8 in. long, entire or irregulaily 

 toothed, glabrous and nearly smooth above when full-grown, white-cottony 

 underneath. Cymes on rather long peduncles, very much branched. Flowers 

 very numerous, glabrous, and larger than in the foregoing species. Calyx 

 truncate or sinuately toothed. Anthers small, the filaments much exserted. 

 — 0. nvdifiora. Hook, and Am. Bot. Beech. 306, t. 46. 



Hongkong, Champion, Wright. Plentiful at East Point, Wilford. Also on the adjacent 

 continent, but not known out of S. China. 



5. C. longifolia,, Lam.; S<ihau.inDO.Prod.id.64-5,y3x.brevipes. A 

 shrub, sometimes glabrous, but more frequently more or less sprinkled with 



* Specimens were distributed .by Roxburgh under the name of C. cana; but the G. cana 

 of his Flora is the trae C. cana, Linn., and was originally named C. dentata by Roxburgh. 

 Specimens of the (7. macropMla have been distributed by Wallich as C. Roxburghii, n. 1833, 

 as well as under the n. ISaS, which has occasioned much confusion between this species and 

 the preceding one. 



