ACCOUNT OF GENUS SEDUM AS FOUND IN CULTIVATION. 163 
native American form is shown by a characteristic specimen of it 
in the British Museum, labelled Nevii, from Peaks of Otter, Virginia, 
Fig. 88. — 5. Nevii var, Beyrichianiim Praeger. 
collected by A. H. Curtiss in 1872 ; this is even more diffuse and more 
slender than the cultivated Beyrichianum. 
It has apparently been in cultivation for a long time. My specimens 
came from Glasnevin, Kegel and KesselrinCx of Petrograd, and Mr. 
Murray Hornibrook of Abbeyleix, Queen's County. 
68. Sedum adenotrichum Walhch (fig. 89). 
5. adenotrichum Wallich, " Catalogue " No. 7231. Hooker fil. and 
Thoms. in Journ. Linn. Soc, Bot., 2, loi (excluding var. P). 
C. B. Clarke in Hooker, " Flor. Brit. India," 2, 420. 
Synonym. — S. anoicum Praeger in Journ. of Bot., 57, 52, 191 9. 
Illustration. — Saunders, " Refug. Botan.," tab. 296. 
Of the type of the well-known Scdum spathtdi folium Hooker and 
of S. yossmitense Britton (especially as regards its growth-form), 
and of some of the species which Britton places in a separate genus 
Gormania, the leaves being much like those of Sedum (Gor mania) 
oreganum Nuttall ; but the three species named are all yellow-flowcrcd. 
In the present plant the rosettes of smooth, spathulate, light-green 
