OCTOBER, I910.| THE ORCHID REVIEW. 297 
TREVORIA LEHMANNI. 
WHEN the late Consul F. C. Lehmann described the remarkable genus 
d at 500 
in fruit only, and a second found in 
Colombia, at 1,000 to 1,700 métres elevation, in 1896. The latter had 
é * 
Trevoria, he remarked that there were two species, one. di!scovere 
métres elevation, in Ecuador, in 1887, 
rather short racemes of three to five flowers, but the former had racemes. of 
Fig. 18. TREVORIA’ LEHMANNI. 
y set with seed vessels, indi 
— 
40 centimétres long, thick 
thirty flowers. The Colombian species was described and figt 
name of Trevoria Chloris (Gard. Chron., 1897, i. p. 345, Suppl., fig. 128). 
In October, 1900, a plant obtained under this name flowered in the collec- 
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4 
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ae 
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tion of Sir Trevor Lawrence, Bart., when I gave the history of the genus 
