424 



(2) C. PTTSiLti. flAndl.J 



Ident. Lindl. gen. and sp. p. 489. 



Spec. Chae. Very small : leaves ovate, aristate-acuminate : 

 flo-wers quite glabrous : segments of the lip oblong, toothed at the 

 apex : petals clawed, rhomboid at the apex : arms of the column 

 ascending, adnate : flowers in pairs. 



Ehasia hills, among moss. 



GEinJS LXXI. GOODTEEA. 



Crynandrla Monandvla. Sex: Syst. 



Gen. Chae. Sepals herbaceous, lateral ones placed on the lip, 

 dorsal one agglutinated with the petals into a helmet : lip free or 

 connate with the column, ventricose or concave, without callosities, 

 undivided : column dwarf, straight, terete : stigina membranaceous, 

 rounded or beaked : anther dorsal : pollen masses two, sectile. — 

 Terrestrial, caulescent herbs : roots aucculgnit, fibrous : leaves 

 narrowed into a sheathed petiole : flowers spicate, usually 

 pubescent. 



(1) G. PEocEEA. fSboker.J 



Ident. Hooker Exotic Flora, t. 39. Lin41v gen. and sp. p. 493. 



Syn. Neottia procera, Ker. in £ot. Reg. t. 639. 



Spec. Chae. Caulescent, glabrous : leaves landeolate, aeuminate, 

 shorter than the scape : spike dense, elongated, cylindric : bracts 

 ovate acuminate longer than the ovsiry : flowers sub-globose : sepals 

 and petals roundish convex, obtuse : lip Tentricose, callous at the 

 apex, apieulate, villous wiljiin : upper angles of the column acu- 

 minated: flowers white. 



Silhet, flowering in the cold season. BurHar, Eastern slopes 

 of the Neilgherries. Courtallum. Malabar. 



(2) G. OVAIIEOIJA. (R. W.J 



Ident. Wight's Icon. v. t. 1730. 



SiPEC. Chae. Eoots creeping : leaves ovate-acuminate; or oval, 

 short-pointed : petiole dilated : spikes long, slender, thinnish, 

 pubescent : lower bracts as long as the ovaries, acute : sepals some- 

 what pubescent, ovate-acute : Kp shorter than the sepals, 3-toothed 

 at the point, fuinished within with a fimbriated appendage : ovary 

 cylindrical, pilose : flowers white with a reddish tinge externally. 



Courtallum, in dense forests, flowering in August and September. 



