14 



PLANT MATERIAL INTRODUCED 



88738 to 88772— Continued. 



88747. ECHEVERIA GIBBIFLORA DC. 



Variety carunculata. 



88748. Echeveria glauca Baker. 



A stemless succulent with small 

 dense rosettes of nearly orbicular, very 

 pale, slightly glaucous leaves having a 

 purple mucro. The flowers are borne 

 in a small secund raceme. It is native 

 to Mexico. 



88749. Echeveria imbricata Deleuil. 



Said to be a hybrid between Eche- 

 veria glauca and E. metallica. 



88750. Echeveria multicadlis Rose. 



For previous introduction and de- 

 scription see No. 88735. 



88751. Echeveria pachyphttioides L. 

 de Smet. 



Said to be a cross between Pacliy- 

 pliytum tracteosum and Echeveria 



metallica. 



88752. Kalanchoe rotundifolia Haw. 

 Crassulaceae. 



A succulent perennial 1 to 3 feet high 

 with a slender stem which has a few 

 leaves at the base and is naked above. 

 The fleshy leaves, 1 to 2 inches long, 

 vary in shape from broadly obovate to 

 spatulate, and are entire or crenate. 

 The small orange or yellow flowers are 

 borne in flat-topped panicles. Native to 

 South Africa. 



For previous introduction see No. 

 86235. 



88753 to 88757. Sedum spp. Crassula- 

 ceae. Stonecrop. 



88753. Sedum acre majus Masters. 



A form which is larger and more 

 robust than the type* having deltoid- 

 ovoid leaves in 7 rows, and 2-parted 

 cymes of yellow flowers nearly an inch 

 across. It is native to Morocco. 



88754. Sedum compressum Rose. 



A prostrate succulent with closely 

 set, flat spatulate leaves 1 to 2 inches 

 long, and erect or ascending flowering 

 branches bearing secund racemes of 

 bright-yellow flowers. It is native to 

 Mexico. 



88755. Sedum dendroideum Moc. &nd 

 Sesse. 



A smooth, much-branched, shrubby 

 succulent a foot high, with fleshy, flat, 

 obovate to spatulate leaves, 1 to 2 

 inches long, and numerous bright-yel- 

 low flowers in a paniculate cyme. It 

 is native to Mexico. 



88756. Sedum multiceps Coss. and 

 Dur. 



A dwarf, subshrubby succulent up to 

 6 inches high with flexuous barren 

 shoots having dense rosettes of pink- 

 ish, papillose, linear leaves at their 

 tips and taller erect flowering shoots 

 bearing scorpioid cymes of pale yellow 

 flowers half an inch across. It is 

 native to Algeria. 



88757. Sedum pachyphyllum Rose. 



A spreading or erect much-branched 

 succulent, up to a foot high, with 

 closely set terete glaucous leaves 1 to 3 

 inches long and nearly half an inch in 

 diameter and weak flowering stems less 



88738 to 88772— Continued. 



than an inch long, bearing cymose 

 clusters of yellow flowers. It is native 

 to Mexico. 



88758 to 88772. Sempervivum spp. Cras- 

 sulaceae. Houseleek. 



88758. Sempervivum arboreum L. 



A handsome plant, 2 feet high, with 

 striking rosettes of leaves and at- 

 tractive yellow flowers. 



For previous introduction see No. 

 81187. 



88759. Sempervivum balsamiferum 

 (Webb and Berth.) Schenk. 



A shrubby succulent with rosettes 

 of spatulate leaves which are viscous 

 with a balsamlike substance. The yel- 

 lowish flowers are in panicles. It is 

 native to the Canary Islands. 



88760. Sempervivum berthelotianum 

 (Bolle) Chris*. 



A nearly stemless fleshy plant with 

 a dense rosette of yellowish green nar- 

 rowly spatulate white-ciliate leaves and 

 6 to 10 pale-yellow flowers on a scape 

 a foot or more high. Native to the 

 Canary Islands. 



For previous introduction see No. 

 81189. 



88761. Sempervivum chdorochrysum 

 Hort. 



A horticultural variety for which a 

 place of publication or description has 

 not been found. 



For previous introduction see No. 

 81191. 



88762. Sempervivum cuneatum (Webb 

 and Berth.) Christ. 



A fleshy evergreen plant nearly 3 

 feet high, with wedge-shaped leaves 

 and terminal cymes of yellow flowers. 



For previous introduction see No. 

 81193. 



88763. Sempervivum glutinosum Ait. 



A viscous perennial, iy 2 feet high, 

 with large spatulate fleshy leaves and 

 yellow flowers in terminal cymes. 

 Native to Madeira. 



For previous introduction see No. 

 81195. 



88764. Sempervivum haworthii Salm- 

 Dyck. 



A succulent evergreen perennial with 

 a woody stem and yellow flowers. 

 Native to the Canary Islands. 



For previous introduction see No. 

 81196. 



88765. Sempervivum hybridum Bruegg. 



A natural hybrid between Semper- 

 vivum montanum and S. doelttanum, 

 closely resembling the latter. Native 

 to Switzerland. 



For previous introduction see No. 

 81198. 



88766. Sempervivum maxriqueorum 

 (Bolle) Christ. 



A shrubby succulent 2 to 3 feet high 

 with long-spatulate leaves with red 

 veins and densely ciliate margins and 

 corymbs of golden-yellow flowers on 



