Oyathula.] cxvi. amarantaoe^. (J. D. Hooker.) 723 



solitary peduncled braoteate or not. Wight Ic. 1. 1782. Polvscelis oapitata, 

 Wall. Cat. 6940. 



Tempbbate HiMAiAYA ; from DalhouBie to Sikkim, alt. 6-9000 ft. 

 More herbaceous and slender than C. tomentosa. Leaves 2-5 in., membranous ; 

 petiole i-1 in. Heads 1-lJ in diam., white, glistening j flowers as in C. tomentosa. 



3. C. ceylantca, 3oolc.f.\ erect, tomentose, leaves subsessile elUptio 

 subacute, heads globose solitary. C. capitata, Tkwaites Enum. 249. 



Cbyion ; near Kandy, Thwaites. 



Branches slender, terete. Leaves \\-2 in., pubescent aboye, tomentose beneath. 

 Beads 1 in. diam. Sepals villous. — The specimens are very indifferent. The leaves 

 resemble those of the African 0. glohulifera, Moq., but the branches are more slender 

 and the leaves almost sessile. 



** Clusters of flowers small, solitary, spicate, reflexed. 



4. C. prostrata, Slume Bijd. 549 ; annual, stem creeping below, 

 branches erect or ascending, leaves subsessile elliptic rhomboid-oblong or 

 subpanduriform obtuse, spikes very slender terminal peduncled. Moq. in 

 DC. Prodr. xiii. 2, 326 ; Dalz. Sf Gibs. Bomb. Fl. 219. 0. repens, Moq. 

 I. c. 330. Achyranthes prostrata, Linn. ; Soxb. Fl. Ind. i. 674, and Ed. 

 Carey Sf Wall., ii. 501 ; Chrah. Cat. Bomb. PI. 168. A. repens, Seyne in 

 Both Nov. Sp. 167. A. debilis, Poir. Diet. Suppl. i. 2, 10. Desmochaeta 

 prostrata & micrantha, Z>C. Cat. Sort. Monsp. 1813, 102. D. prostrata, 

 Wight Ic. t. 733. D. patula ? Wall. Cat. 6937. D. repens, Boem. Sf Sch. 

 Syst. V. 552 ; Wall. Cat. 6938. Pupalia prostrata. Mart. Beitr. Amarant. 

 113.— Bheede Hort. Mai. x. t. 79. 



BEKaAL, Sikkim, Khasia Mts., Chittaqono to Malacca, the DBCOAif Penin- 

 BTJliA, BuEMA, and Cetlon. — DiSTBlB. Tropical Asia, Africa, Australasia, Oceania, 

 and America. 



Very slender, 1-2 ft. high, glabrous or scaberulous. Leaves 1-2 in., base narrowed 

 often suddenly from below the middle. Spikes 4-6 in., rarely paniculately branched. 

 Clusters of flowers J in. long, ovoid, blueish. Sepals oblong, pubescent, outer (of 

 imperfect flowers) as long as the perfect. Staminodes 2-fld or retuse. Seeds ovoid- 

 oblong. — Roxburgh believes this to have been introduced into Bengal from the 

 Moluccas. 



9. FUPAZiXiV, Juss. 



Herbs or undershrubs. Leaves opposite. Flowers in spicate clusters, 

 perfect and imperfect; the imperfect reduced to awns bearing stellately 

 spreading hooked bristles. Sepals 5, herbaceous, acuminate, 3-5-nerved. 

 Stamens 6, nearly free below ; anthers 2-celled ; staminodes 0. Ovary 

 ovoid ; style slender, stigma oapitellate ; ovule 1, pendulous from a long basal 

 fnnicle. Utricle ovoid, compressed, indehiscent, top areolate. — Species 3, 

 Asiatic and African. 



1. P. atropurpurea, Moq. in DC. Prodr. xiii. 2, 331 ; slender, 

 erect, leaves petioled ovate or elliptic acute or acuminate, spikes 

 long, raohis slender, clusters remote bracteate woolly, sepals broadly 3- 

 nerved, laxly villous. Bah. Sf Gibs. Bomb. Fl. 219 ; Miq. Fl. Ind. Bat. 

 i. 1046. Achyranthes lappacea, Linn. Sp. PI. Ed. 2, 95 {excl. syn. Ed. 1) ; 

 BoKb. Fl. Ind. i. 673, and in Ed. Carey Sf Wall. ii. 500. A. atropurpurea, 

 Lamh. Diet. i. 546. Desmochaeta atropurpurea, DC. Cat. Sort. Monsp. 

 102; Wall. Cat. 6933, exel.K; Wight Ic. t. 731; Grah. Cat. Bomb. PL 

 1230.— Burm. Fl. Zeyl. 1. 18, f. 1 ; Bheede Sort. Mai. x. t. 69, 



3 A 2 



