MAn. 1911.] MATSUDA.-A LIST OF THE PLANTS COLLECTED. 87 



No m. Jap. Yomena. 



This sp. prcvsents a great number of varied forms. 



Emelia sonchifolia DC. ; Hook. f. F1. Brit. Ind. III. 336 ; 

 DiELS in Engl. Bot. Jahrb. XXIX. Ql'd ;=Senecio soncbifolias 

 MoencH ; Benth. Fl. Hongkong. 189. 



Hab. Hu-nan. 



Nom. Jap. Usuheni-nigatia. 



This species is very variable in form of leaves, the lower 

 ones sometimes being lyrate and sometimes sub-orbicular with 

 long-winged petiole. 



Btnilia £ammea Cass {=Cacalia coccinea Sims in Bot. Mag. 

 t. 564) seems to be an allied sp. ; but the distinction is not 

 clear from descriptions. 



Eupatorium japonicum Thunb. ; Fr. et Sav. Enum. PI. 

 Jap. I 219 ; Forb. et Hemsl. in Journ. Linn. Soc. XXIII. 403 ; 

 DiEivS in Engl. Bot. Jahrb. XXIX. 608. 



Hab. Hu-nan. 



Nom. Jap. Hiyodoribana. 



Eupatorium Reevesii Wall. ; DC. Prodr. Y. 179 ; Benth. 

 Fl. Hongk. 172 ; Forb. et Hemsl. in Journ. Linn. Soc. XXIIL 

 405. 



Hab. Kiang-si : the Lu-shan. (No. 143). 



Stem striated, puberulescent, dense pubescent towards the 

 top, leaves opposite, shortly petiolate, ovate, sub-acuminate, 

 dark brown above {in dry specimens), sub-glabrous, serrate ; in- 

 florescens corymbose, dense-headed, involucre subcylindrical, 

 bracts several, outer ones shorter, acute, the inner longer, 

 obtuse, heads few-flowered, pappus dirty colored, achenia 

 {immat.) ridged, rugose (under slight magniEcation) . 



The determination is not satisfactory. Some Japanese 

 specimens of B. japonicum approach in form the present one. 

 The latter may prove an extreme form oi E. japonicum. 



Hem«ley reports this sp. from Kiang-si : Kiu-Kiang ; and 

 states that the Indian form has a distinct appearance. My 

 plant from the same region slightly deviates from the descrip- 

 tion in Hook. f. Fl. Brit. Ind III. 243. 



Hieracium umbellatum L. ; DC. Prodr. YII. 224 ; Hook. 



