104 



Barrett, in Proc. Agric. Soc. Trinidad, vii. 1907 pp. 107-119 ; 

 " Pruning and Soil Management," I.e. pp. 131-146 ; " Shade " for 

 Cacao, I.e. pp. 167-174 ; « Cacao, General Culture," I.e. pp. 203-214 ; 

 " Cacao Pests of Trinidad," &c, I.e. pp. 281-304 ; "Cocoa Estates 

 of St. Thome and Principe," I.e. pp. 305-314. — " Sur quelques 

 Parasites des Cacaoyers a San Thome (Golfe de Guinee), Gravier, 

 in Bull. Mus. Nat. Hist. No. 3, 1907, pp. 213-218.— " Description 

 of a Drying House for Cocoa," in Quarterly Journ. Inst. Comm. 

 Research in the Tropics, Liverpool, ii. 1907, pp. 121-123, hot air 

 heated by means of iron tubes, with sketch of the ground floor ; 

 cost £300, and capable of drying 60 centals (6000 lb. avoir.) in 

 from- 18 to 60 hours. — " Cocoa," in Maize, Cocoa, and Rubber ; 

 Hints on their production in West Africa, Viscount Mountmorres, 

 pp. 11-32 (Inst. Comm. Research in the Tropics, Liverpool Uni- 

 versity, and Williams & Norgate, London, i 907). — " Cacao or 

 Cocoa," in The World's Commercial Products, Freeman & 

 Chandler, pp. 113-143, with 34 illustrations, including Growing, 

 Harvesting, Sweating, Drying, Sweating and Drying Buildings 

 and Machinery, Manufacture, Varieties of Cocoa, and Map of 

 Cocoa Producing Countries (Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons, Ltd., 

 London, 1907). — " Cocoa from the Gold Coast," in Bull. Imp. Inst. 

 1907, pp. 361-369. — Fungus Diseases of Cacao and Sanitation of 

 Cacao Orchards, Stockdale, Pamphlet No. 54, 1908, pp. 1-47 

 (Substance of Paper in W.I. Bull. ix. 1908, pp. 166-189) issued by 

 the Commissioner, Dept. of Agric, W. Indies (Dulau & Co., 

 London). — The Future of Cacao Planting, with Introduction by 

 Sir Daniel Morris (Tropical Life Publishing Dept., Bale, Sons, & 

 Danielson, Ltd., London). — Le Cacaoyer dans Pouest Africain, 

 Chevalier, pp. 1-245 (Challamel, Paris, 1908). — Tlieobroma Cacao, 

 in Comm. Prod. India, Watt, pp. 1076-1077, 1908.— " Pruning 

 Cacao," Cradwick, in Proc. Agric. Soc. Trinidad, viii. 1908, 

 pp. 181-183.— " Shade or no Shade," I.e. pp. 229-233.— " Cacao 

 Industry," in West Indian Bull. ix. No. 2, 1908, pp. 138-192, 

 including " Manurial Experiments," Dominica, Dr. Watts ; 

 11 Grafting Cacao," Jones ; " Experiments at Grenada," Anstead ; 

 St. Lucia, Moore ; Brit. Guiana, Prof. Harrison ; " The Characters 

 of Criollo Cocoa," Hart ; " Improvement of Cacao Planting in the 

 West Indies," Hart ; "Fungus Diseases of Cacao and Sanitation of 

 Cacao Orchards," Stockdale ; " Cacao Thrips," Ballou. 



TRIPLOCHITONACEAE. 



Triplochiton, K. Schum. 



Triplochiton Johnsonii, C. H. Wright, in Hook. Ic. PL t. 2758. 



A tall soft-wooded tree. Leaves palmately 5-lobed, 5 in. long, 

 1\ in. wide, obtuse, cordate at the base, at first obscurely pilose 

 above, quite glabrous beneath ; lobes triangular-ovate ; secondary 

 nerves pinnate ; reticulation fine ; petiole 3 in. long, cymes 

 nxillary, about 20-llowered, shorter than the petioles. Calyx 

 5-partite, 7 lin. in diam. densely and appressedly brownish-silky 

 on both surfaces ; lobes ovate, acute, valvate, patent. Petals 

 obcordate, broadly unguiculate, 7 lin. long and wide, pilose on 

 both surfaces, white with a purplish base. Gynandrophore 1-2 lin. 

 long, pubescent. Stamens about 20 ; filaments filiform, sometimes 



