88 BrITToN: CuBAN PLANTS NEw TO SCIENCE 
glabrous or nearly so in age; hypanthium appressed brown- 
pilose; fruit unknown, 
Sierra del Caballete, Sancti Spiritus mountains, Santa Clara, 
at 800-850 m. altitude (Léon & Clement 6540). 
Eugenia Cowellii Britton & Wilson, sp. nov. 
A shrub, 1-2 m. high, the slender gray twigs puberulent when 
young, soon glabrous. Leaves oblong to orbicular-elliptic, coria- 
ceous, very small, only 4-7 mm. long, rounded at both ends, tuber- 
culate and veinless above, black-punctate and with the midvein 
rather prominent beneath, the petioles about 1 mm. long; fruit 
subglobose or ellipsoid, red, about 9 mm. long. 
Coastal rocks, southern Oriente. Type collected at Cabafias 
Bay (Britton & Cowell 12716). 
Eugenia (?) cabanasensis Britton & Wilson, sp. nov. 
A tree 6 m. high, the numerous slender twigs gray, glabrous. 
Leaves oblong-obovate, coriaceous, light green, 8-15 mm. long, 
4-6 mm. wide, rounded at the apex, narrowed or cuneate at the 
base, smooth, shining and with the midvein impressed above, dull, 
copiously tuberculate-punctate and with the midvein rather prom- 
inent beneath, the internal venation wholly obscure, the petioles 
about I mm. long; flowers and fruit unknown. 
Rocky hillside, Cabafias Bay, southern Oriente (Britton & 
Cowell 12820). 
Eugeina moensis Britton & Wilson, sp. nov. 
A shrub or a slender tree up to 5 m. high, glabrous through- 
out, the slender twigs densely leafy. Leaves narrowly oblong or 
linear-oblong, 2.5-4 cm. long, 6-10 mm. wide, rounded or obtuse 
at the apex, narrowed at the base, tuberculate-punctate on both 
sides, the midvein lightly impressed above, faint beneath, the lat- 
eral venation almost wholly obscure, the rather stout petioles 4-7 
mm. long; flowers axillary, solitary, on filiform peduncles about 
2 cm. long; calyx about 2.5 mm. long, its lobes ovate; young 
fruit narrowly oblong, 6 mm. long. 
Rocky banks of mountain stream, Camp La Gloria, south of 
Sierra Moa (Shafer 8100). 
A shrub with similar foliage, but with the leaves nearly smooth 
on both sides and the midvein prominent beneath, growing along 
a rocky river near Camp San Benito, Oriente, at 900 meters ele- 
‘vation, may be a related species. 
