334 saukukace;e. yHouUvynia. 



A genus limited to a single Asiatic species, unless it be extended to include the closely 

 allied Califomian Anemonopsis. 



1. H. cov&aXa.^ Thunb. 11. Jap. 234, t. 26 ; Bot. Mag. t. 3731. Ehi- 

 zome creeping. Stems erect, glabrous, 1 to 2 ft. high. Leaves stalked, 

 heart-shaped, acuminate, entire, \\ to 3 in. long, glandular-dotted, glabrous 

 or slightly pubescent on the nerves. Spikes pedunculate, ^ to 1 in. long ; 

 the outer bracts usually 4, obovate, white, 3 or 4 lines long. Stamens longer 

 than the ovary. 



Hongkong, Wright. In the mountains of northern India, in Siam, China, Formosa, Loo- 

 choo, and Japan. 



Order C. CHLOR^NTHACE^. 



Flowers hermaphrodite or unisexual. Perianth none. Stamens 1 or more, 

 epigynous in the hermaphrodite flowers. Ovary l-celled, with 1 pendulous 

 ovule. Stigma sessile, thick, entire or notched. Fruit a small indehiscent 

 drupe. Embryo minute, within the top of a fleshy albumen. — Trees, shrubs, 

 or rarely herbs. Leaves opposite, connected by sheathing stipules. Flowers 

 in simple or branched often articulate spikes, terminal or in the upper asils. 



A small tropical or subtropical Order, with one American and one Asiatic genus. 



1. CHLORAlfTHUS, Sw. 



Flowers hermaphrodite. Stamens consisting of a thick fleshy short filament, 

 inserted on (adnate to) one side of the ovary, wi]th 1 adnate 2-celled anther, 

 sometimes accompanied by 2 smaller lateral l-celled ones. 



A small genus, comprising all the Asiatic species of the Order. 



Anthers single, 2-ceUed. (Spikes usually 1 or 2.) . . . . . . . \. d 



A single-celled anther on each side of the 2-ceIIed one. (Spikes slen- 

 der, paniculate.) 2. C. inconspicuia. 



1. C. brachystachys, Blume, M. Jav. Chlor. 13, t. 2. An erect 

 branching glabrous undershrub, of about 3 ft. Leaves stalked, from ovate to 

 oblong-elliptical, 2 to 4 in. long, serrate, shining above, pale underneath with 

 a few scattered glands. Spikes simple or once (rarely twice) forked, \ to near 

 1 in. long. Flowers green. Stamen ovoid, with a single 2-oeEed anther. 

 Drupe red, the size of a currant. — C. ceylanicus, Miq. Fl. Ned. Ind. i. 803. 

 Sareandra ohloranthoides, Gardn.; Wight, Ic. t. 1946. 



In ravines. Champion, Hapce. ' In Ceylon, Penang, the Archipelago, and northward to 

 the Philippines and Loochoo. ' 



2. C. inconspicuus, '%.; Miq. Fl. Ned.. Ind. i. 802. A glabrous 

 shrub. Leaves usually smaller, less coriaceous, and less toothed than in O. 

 hrachystachys. Spikes slender, ^ to 1 in. long, in branched panicles. Stamens 

 thick, ovate, 3-lobed ; the central lobe bearing a 2-ceUed anther, the 2 lateral 

 smaller ones each with a l-celled anther. 



Hongkong, Bance. A native of China, said to be often cultivated in Chinese and Japan- 

 ese gardens. 



