PLATE 388. 
Secamone Geeeardi, Harv. (Harv. MSS.. Schleoliter, Jour, of Bot. 1895, p. 353.) 
Natural Order, Asclbpiadacb/E. 
A slender wide climbing shrub with greenish yellow flowers. Stems and 
branches terete, slender, green, glabrous. Leaves opposite, petiolate, exstipulate, 
narrow-oblong, acute at apex, tapering gradually to the shor-t petiole, midrib con- 
spicuous on both sides, dark green and glossy above, lighter and dull beneath ; If 
to 2 inches long, 4 to 9 lines wide ; petiole 1 to 1^ line long. Inflorescence 
axillary, in few flowered cymes, peduncle and pedicels f inch long, very slender, 
bracts minute, ovate, f line long. Caljx campanulate, 5-loberl, tul)e 2 lines long, 
lobes linear-oblong, twisted to tlie right, spreading, 3 liufs long. Coronal lobes 
minute, linear, incurved. Stamens 5, from base of corolla, filaments adnate to the 
dilated portion of the style, and terminated by fimbriate, membranous appendages 
which overlap the stigma. Pollen masses 20, subglobose, attached in lours to the 
pollen carriers, which are seated on the dilated portion of the style. Style dilated 
in lower portion and produced beyond the dilated part into a 2-lobed appendage. 
Follicles acuminate, each 4 inches long by -| inch wide at base. 
Habitat : Natal : Coast and midlands, common. 
The genus Secamone includes nearly 50 species, of which 3 are natives of 
Natal, the remainder being found in tropical and subtropical regions of the Old 
World, and adjacent islands. 8. Gerrardi differs from all other species of the 
genus by its much larger flowers, campanulate corolla tube, and longer gynostege. 
It is not uncommon in coast and midlands, usually climbing over trees and shrubs 
at edges of woods. 
This plant was first described by Professor Harvey, but the description does 
not seem to have been published ; it was more lately described by Mr. R. Schlechter 
in the Journal of Botany for 1895, page 353. 
Fig 1, flower, 2, calyx ; 3, corona, staminal column and style appendages; 
4, coronal lobe; 5, stamen, inside view; 6, pollinia and carrier; 7, young follicles, 
style and stigma with appendages ; 8, thickened portion of style, showing pollinia 
attached; 9, follicles, /ia^/wa^ size ; 10, seed, natural size. ; except figs. 9 and 10 all 
enlarged. 
