602 
ADDENDA ET CORRIGENDA. 
17 bis. T. CERNUT7M Bl*ot. 
Smooth succulent light gr. ; st. slender why procumbent elongate 
diffusely branched and spreading, subremotely leafy, hollow ; petioles 
long slender ; lfts. obcordate or retusely obcuneate or obovate, mucro- 
nulate, finely and sharply serrulate, the nerves simple (not thickened) 
excurrent ; heads umbellate many-fld. hemispherical on short erect 
slender or filiform axillary ped. much shorter than the petioles ; fl. 
small distinctly stalked lax subumbellate drooping or deflexed in fruit, 
their pedic. smooth as long as the cal. -tube, with a minute setaceous 
bractlet at its base much shorter than itself ; cal. 10-ribbed or 
striate, unchanged in fr., the tube sprinkled upwards with a few 
hairs, glabrescent downwards, throat naked open, teeth smooth finely 
aristato-linear-acuminate, in fr. sctaceo-subulate, subequal, the two 
upper rather longer than the lower and as long as the cor., at first 
erect, then spreading, recurved in fr. ; cor. marcescent persistent, 
standard much longer than the keel or wings, dilated or spoon- 
sliaped and distinctly emarginate or concavely obcordate striated, 
scarious and deflexed in fr. ; style uncinate at top ; pod sessile ob- 
ovate-oblong scarcely exserted 1-4-seeded, seeds small subreniforraly 
oval y. or fulvous. — Brot. Phyt. i. 150, t. 62 ; DC. ii. 199; Spr. iii. 
208. T. serrulatum Lag. Gen. et Sp. Nov. 23 ? T. minutum Coss. 
Notes sur quelques Plantes Critiques (Paris, 1848). T. Perrey- 
mondi Gren. et Godr. i. 422 ; Lloyd Fl. de L’Ouest de la France 
(ed. 2, 1868) p. 141. “ T. parvijlorum Perreym. cat. Frejus p. 84 
(non Ehrh.)” Gr. et Godr. 1. c. — Herb. ann. Mad. rcg. 2, 3, rrr. 
Bib. das Freiras, a small branch ravine above the road, W. of Ca- 
ni 90 , S r Moniz ; plentifully in a wet place close to the path descend- 
ing into the Curral das Freiras near Pico do Cedi'O, and in a very 
dwarfed depauperated state in the mountain turf on Pico Grande, 
Capt. Norman. June- July. — Closely connecting Sect. V. Lotoidea L. 
with VI. I/upulina L., and perhaps rather belonging by its scarious 
striated deflexed spoon-shaped standard to the latter. Yet in habit 
it approaches rather nearer T. repens L., though it is altogether 
much more delicate and slender. It has also been compared with 
T. glomeratum L., but I cannot see the affinity. Whole pi. smooth 
tender or succulent flaccid light gr. Root small fibrous ; st. nu- 
merous from its crown, 6-12 or even 18 in. long, round but strongly 
grooved or striate, procumbently spreading all round, the ends 
ascending. Stip. membranous ovate finely acuminato-aristate or 
produced into long setaceous points. Lower petioles 2 or 3 in. 
long, upper about £ in., all slender filiform. Lfts. 3 or 4-6 lines 
long, 2-4 lines broad, perfectly smooth with numerous straight 
sharply spinuloso-excurrcnt nerves. Ped. 2-3 lines long always 
erect smooth from ^ to i the length of the petioles. Heads from 20 
to 30 or more-fld., fl. about 2 lines long, narrow-oblong, at first 
fasciculate and somewhat lax and spreading, presently umbellatcly 
closc-deflexed as in T. repens L. Cor. pale whitish-pink or flesh- 
col. or w. with darker lines, turning brown in fr. Cal. -tube com- 
pressed, narrow oblong in fl., obovate and strongly 10-ribbed in fr., 
not dehiscent. Seeds subcompressed, 1 mill, in their longer diarn. 
