82 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. 



P. elongatus, L'Her. ex Pers., Syn. Conif. ii. (1807) 580. 

 Three specimens, two sterile, one fruiting, correctly named, collected 

 by Mundt and Maire at the Cape ; ex Herb. Reg. Berol. 

 One sterile specimen from the same source. 



P. latifolius, R. Br. ex Mirbel, Geogr. Conif. in Mem. Mus. Paris, 

 xiii. (1825), 75. 



A sterile specimen, named P. macrophyllus, from the same collectors 

 and same source as the preceding. 



P. Nagi, Pilger, 1. c. 60. (P. Nageia, R. Brown, 1. c. 75.) 



A fruiting specimen gathered by Veitch in Japan, labelled ' Podo- 

 carpus Nageia, R. Br. 285. Dammar a sp. Foliage similar to D. 

 Brownii but lighter. Yeddo.' 



P. andinus, Poeppig ex Endl., Syn. Conif. (1847) 219 (Prumno- 

 pitys elegans, Phil, in Linnaea, xxx. (i860), 731). 



A large male specimen collected by Dombey (No. 936) in Peru, 

 labelled ' Juniperus. Ex Herb. Mus. Paris.' 



A smaller specimen ( $ ) named 1 Prumnopitys elegans, Phil. River 

 Traiguen, in the province of Valdivia.' Accompanying this specimen 

 are two fruits forwarded by Veitch. 



A male specimen collected by Funck and Schlim (1538) in the 

 Province of Merida, Venezuela, at 7000 ft. elevation, in 1847. Fl. 

 April. Received from J. Linden. 



Cunninghamia sinensis, R. Brown in Richard, Conif. 80, t. 18, 

 f. 3 (1826). 



A cone-bearing specimen by Fortune, labelled ' C. lanceolata, 

 Chekiang, China.' 



A large specimen with male strobiles, labelled * Hort. Lambert, 

 1820 ' ; and a very small fruiting specimen, labelled ' China, Reeves.' 



Agathis ovata, Warburg, Monsunia, 186 (1900) ; Dammar a 

 ovata, C. Moore, ex Gordon, Pinet. Suppl. 28 (1862). 



Two sterile specimens accompanied by three cone-scales and two 

 seeds, labelled ' Dammar a ovata ' ; New Caledonia, Young and 

 Moore. 



A sterile specimen labelled ' D. obtusa, Lindley ; New Hebrides 

 and Fiji Islands, C. Moore.' 



Agathis Moorei, Masters, Kew Handl. Conif. 59 (1896). D. 

 Moorei, Lindley in Journ. Hort. Soc. vi. (1851), 271. 



Three sterile specimens so named with an accompanying note : — 

 ' Dammara sp. Hab. Island of New Caledonia. In habit and appear- 

 ance very unlike any other Dammara, and by far the most elegant of 

 the genus, and of much smaller size, seldom above 40 ft. high ;• it has 

 an erect compact growth, yet withal graceful — in a range of country 

 of some miles extent, where it grows sparingly, not a cone could be 

 discovered, but from information derived from an English settler it 

 produces a smaller-sized cone than D. australis.' C. Moore, No. 8. 



A cone was subsequently received by Lindley from the Botanical 

 Gardens, Sydney, N.S.W., which is preserved in the Cambridge 

 Museum, Case No. xxvi., Specimen No. 2840. 



