Enumeration of the Flowering Plants and Feens of 

 St. Vincent and adjacent Islets. 



DlLLENIACEiE. 



Curatella americana, L. — V. 1788. Widely spread in tropical South 



DC.—Y. 1234. St. Lucia, Martinique. 



Trigynaea antillana, Rolfe ; ramis ferrugineo- 

 breviter petiolatis oblongis acuminatis eoriaceis glabi 

 impressis subtus prominentibus, floribus axiliaribus, bracteis ovato- 

 oblongis concavis ferrugineo-pubescentibus, sepalis late triangulo-ovatis 

 cum pedicel!^ ferrugineo -trigosis, petalis ovato -oblongis concavis 

 crassiuscnlis suba-qualibus, ovarii* uniovulatis. 



Forest ridges and valleys. V. 1359, 1539. 



" Arbor, 20 pad. alta." Folia 3£-7 poll, longa, l£-2£ poll. lata. 

 Pedicdli 2-3 lin. longi. Sepala 1 lin. longa. Petala 3 lin. longa. 



This tropical American grim- lias not previously been recorded from 

 the West Indies. The Gvm-ra Pl„,<tar«m speaks of the ovules as in- 

 definite, but in those Ave have examined they range from one to few in 



Rollinia Sieberi, A.DC.—V. 621. Trinidad, San Domingo and 

 South Mexico. 



Anona muricata, L.—Y. 403 ; B. 56 ; M. 157. Native of tropical 

 America, and now very widely cultivated, so that it is difficult to 

 determine where it is really indigenous. 



Anona palustris, L. — V. 1518. Tropical America, chiefly along the 



Anona reticulata, L. — V. 877. Common in tropical America, both 



Chondodendron tomentosum, Ruiz ft Pav., syn. Cocculus tamoides. 

 DC.—Y. 528. Widely dispersed in tropical South America. 



Cissampelos Pareira, L. — V. 355, 1311, 1877. Common in nearly all 



Nymphaea ampla, DC— V. 1708. This ranges from Texas and 



