Plate 27. 



STBEPTOCARPUS dunnii. 



Transvaal. 



Gesneeaceae. Tribe Cyrtandeeae. 

 Streptocarpus, Lindl. ; Benth. et ffoolc. Gen. Plant, vol. ii. p. 1023. 



Streptocarpus Dunnii, Hook. f. Bot. Mag. t. 6903 ; Fl. Cap. iv. sect. 2, 



p. 442. 



This species of Streptocarpus, which belongs to a section of 

 the genus characterised by the development of one leaf only, 

 was first brought to the notice of horticulturists in 1884 by 

 Mr. E. Q-. Dunn, who sent seeds to Kew from Spitzkop in the 

 Transvaal. 



The seeds germinated freely, and in May and June of 

 1886 the plants were a feature of the Succulent House at 

 Kew. The genus Streptocarpus is well represented in South 

 Africa, and at least 24 distinct species are known. 



Our illustration was made from plants grown by Mr. C. E. 

 Gray, Pretoria, from specimens collected by Dr. Pole Evans 

 on Mr. Geo. Heys' farm, Weltevreden, Machadodorp, where 

 it grows on rocks at the side of a stream. 



Desckiption : — Leaf sometimes up to 1 m. long and 45 cm. 

 broad, hairy beneath, sometimes shaggy on the upper surface, 

 with crenate margins. Peduncles up to 15 cm. long, terete, 

 pilose, bearing many flowers arranged more or less in a cymose 

 manner. Calyx divided almost to the base ; lobes 5 mm. long, 

 lanceolate or linear-lanceolate, subacute, ciliate. Corolla-tube 

 2*2 cm. long, pubescent in bud, becoming more or less glabrous 

 with age, gradually widening from the base upwards; lobes 

 4 mm. long, 4 mm. broad, more or less transversely oblong, 

 broadly rounded at the apex. Style densely pilose below. 



Plate 27. — Fig. 1, inflorescence; Eig. 2, plant reduced 

 E.P.S.A., 1921. 



