2546 



SUPPLEMENT. 



u Fungi. Apneas Hudson/ Pars., syn.A. pilosua 



So, r . t on the leaves ; Spha?Via yiquifolii Fr., and 

 8. insculpta Fr., on the bark ; and 8. /'licis Scl/L, 

 S. Aicincola, Stegia /lieis Fr., syn. Xyloma con- 

 c -aviun Grcv., and Ceuthospora phacidioides Grev. y 

 on the leaves. — il/. .7". B." 



Page 509, line 31. from the bottom, insert : "In 



Suffolk, at Stutton Rectory, there is a holly 



90 years planted, with a trunk 3 ft. 9 in. in 



diameter." 



I. balcarica. 516., add to the list of Engravings: 



" and our fig. 2426." 

 519., before App. i., insert: — 



■ * I. magellanica Lodd. Cat., 1836. There are 

 plants of this species in the arboretum of Messrs. 

 Loddiges, and in the Horticultural Society's 

 Garden.' 1 



Prinos deciduus. 521. 1. 6., add to the end of the paragraph : " SphseVia 

 friabilis Pers. is found on the bark ; and Rhytisma ilicicola Fr., and 

 R. velatum Fr., on the leaves. — M. J. B" 

 P. vcrticiUdtus. 521. 1. 7. from the 

 bottom, after the full 

 stop, add : " Rhytisma 

 Prini Fr. is found on 

 this species." 

 P. gldber. 522, in the line 

 headed " Engraving" for 

 " The figure," &c, substi- 

 tute " and our fig. 2428." 

 P. coridecus. 523., to the para- 

 graph headed " Engrav- 

 ings" add : " and our fig. 

 2427." 



i?HAMNA V CE;E. 



7Jzyphus sinensis. 525. last two lines, for " and we have never seen it," read 



" there is a plant in the Horticultural Society's Garden." 

 Z. Jujuba. 527., add to the paragraph : " Fig. 



2429. shows the leaves, fruit of different 



shapes, and stones (the last of the /^^^ 



natural size), of Ztzyphns Jtyuba, taken *** 



from Hooker's Journal of Botany, 



2d ser., t. 140. In the account of 



this species given in the Journal of 



Hot any, vol. i. p. 320., by M. L. Bouton, 



Vice-Secretary of the Natural History 



Society of the Mauritius, it is stated, 



that tin; Xj/.yplms Jupiba> which is 



known in the island by the name of 



Motion, grows there to the height of 



■bout 26ft. or 30ft. There are a 



number of different varieties, which 



I e divides into two sections, viz. 



those with flesh adhering to the nut, 



and tboM with flesh that does not adhere. 



when ripe, is a greenish yellow in some varieties, and a reddish brown 



in others. Z. mauiitiana and Z. rotundata Dec. Prod., M. Bouton 



Considers to be only two of the varieties which he has described. The 



different forms of the fruit are shown in the engraving from which our 



figure il copied ; as are the two forms of the stones, or nuts, which are 



21.7 



The colour of the fruit, 



