﻿50 SEEDS AND PLANTS IMPORTED. 



41168 to 41243— Continued. (Quoted notes by Mr. O. F. Cook.) 

 41189 to 41192. (Undetermined.) 



41189. "No. 624. Ollantaytambo, Peru, June 8, 1915. From a 

 small liliaceous plant on a reforested terrace, 1 league above 

 Ollantaytambo. The tubers are like small yams or calathea tubers. 

 To be raised for identification." 



Tubers. 



41190. "No. 1069. Colpani, Peru, June 1, 1915. Pulla-pulla. A 

 liliaceous plant, to be raised for identification." 



Bulbs. 



41191. "No. 225. Tinta, Peru, April 16, 1915. Cactus, Ayrampo. 

 Planted on walls." 



Cuttings. 



41192. "No. 1923. Ollantaytambo, Peru, July 20, 1915. Cactus." 

 Cuttings. 



41193. Furcraea sp. Amaryllidacea?. 



"No. 1917. Ollantaytambo, Peru, July 20, 1915. Chuchao. A native 

 fiber plant very abundant in the dry districts about Ollantaytambo and 

 ascending to an altitude of over 10,000 feet. Propagates by bulblets 

 which are produced on the inflorescence, with or without flowers. May 

 have possibilities as a hardy type very easy to propagate." 



41194. Ullucus tuberosus Caldas. Basellacea?. Ullucu. 

 " No. 2023. La Paz, Bolivia, August 4, 1915. Papa lisa." 



Tubers. 



41195. Tropaeolum tuberosum Ruiz and Pavon. Tropaeolacea?. Anyu. 

 . " No. 2029. Ushcopata, Sicuani. Peru, April 9, 1915. Pucaanu. From 



Ushcopata, a few miles above Sicuani. Marked with purplish across the 

 eyes. See No. 2024 [S. P. I. 41185]." 

 Tubers. 



41196. Ullucus tuberosus Caldas. Basellacese. XJllucu. 

 " No. 2037. Santa Ana, Peru, July 6, 1915. Papa lisa. Raised at Vil- 



cabamba, Peru. Round, deep-yellow variety, variable in size." 



Tubers. 

 41197 to 41243. Solanum tuberosum L. Solanaceae. Potato. 



" Peru is the home of the potato, which is the principal crop throughout 

 the region of the high table-lands and along the eastern and western 

 slopes of the Cordilleras. On the western slopes, which are exposed to the 

 cold, the cultivation of potatoes is carried down to the shores of the 

 Pacific, but on the eastern slope seldom extends below 8,000 feet, corn 

 becoming the dominant crop below 10,000 feet. The number of potato 

 varieties is very large, and a very great diversity of forms is shown, far 

 beyond anything with which we are familiar in the United States. Un- 

 like the varieties of corn, most of which are named only by color, the 

 potato varieties have special names, though strains of different colors 

 are recognized in many of the varieties. No attempt was made to secure 

 a complete collection of varieties, but a series of photographs was made 

 in order to show the general range of forms. The specimens were 

 brought back with a view to supplementing the collection of South 

 American varieties made by Mr. W. F. Wight in 1913." 



Tubers. 



