PALMS AND CTCADS. 
71 
PALMS AND CYCADS— Continued. 
LICUALA PELTATA 
LIVISTONA ALTISSIMA 
„ HOOaENDOEPII 
„ HUMILIS 
„ OlilV-ffiFOEMIS 
„ SUBGLOBOSA — Livistona 
rotundifolia, Saribus rotun- 
difollus 
MALORTIEA GRACILIS 
MARTINEZIA CARYOTJEFOLIA 
MAXmiLIANA ELEGANS 
„ REGIA 
»MOLINIA CHILENSIS— Cocos chi- 
lensis, Jubsea spectabilis ■ 
(ENOCARPUS DEALBATUS 
ONCOSPERIITJM FASICULATUM— 
Areoa horrida 
CRANIA MACROCLADUS 
OREODOXA GHIESBREGHTII— eyjt. O. 
ventricosa 
„ REGIA 
,, SANCONA — syn. Euterpe edulis 
#PH(ENIX DACTYLIFERA, the Date 
Palm. 2s. 6il. to 1S«. 
w j, FARINIFERA — sy/i. leonensis 
* „ HUMILIS 
„ PUMILA 
* „ RECLINATA 
* „ SXLVESTRIS 
* „ TENUIS 
PHCENICOPHORIUM SECHELLARUM 
— st/n. Stevensonia seohellarum, 
a very elegant and distinct Palm, 
with dark olive green leaves, spotted 
with gold 
PTYCHOSPERMA ALEXANDR.^ 
„ COSTATUM 
„ ELEGANS, a handsome stove Palm 
of free growth, remarkable for its 
bilobed fish-tail -like leaves. Those 
on the young plants are about a 
foot long, and as much broad, 
divided to below the middle into 
two diverging long caudate divi- 
sions. The petioles are terete, 
nearly a foot long, quite smooth, 
erect, as thick as a quill, and the 
leaves are so strongly ribbed on 
tho upper surface as to give them 
a somewhat plaited appearance. 
A very effective and striking- 
looking Palm, sent from Central 
America by Dr. Seeman. 15s. 
„ GRACILE 
„ LACERATUM, a neat-growing 
stove Palm, of distinct character, 
and apparently of a dwarf 
close habit of growth. Tho leaf 
stalks are broad and sheathing 
at the base, flattened and slender 
upwards, and angular on the dorsal 
side. The leaf blades are broad and 
bilobed, with an excm’rent thread 
in the sinus, tho lobes (in the young 
plants) upwards of an inch across, 
and lacoratoly split at the apex, 
while tho surface is ribbed so as to 
appear plicate. Its apparently 
dense close habit of growth re- 
commends it as a useful and dis- 
tinct decorative Palm. It is a 
native of Central America, whence 
seeds were brought home by Dr. 
Scemann. 15». 
PTYCHOSPERMA NOBILE 
„ POLYSTACHIUM 
„ RUPICOLA 
PHYTELEPHAS MACROCARPA, the 
Peruvian Ivory Palm. Ij guineas 
„ MICROCARPA 
PINANGA MACULATA 
PRITCHARDIA PACIFICA 
REGELIA PRINCEPS— sy«. Verschaffeltia 
spleudida 
RAPHIA HOOKERII 
„ TAEDIGERA 
*RAPHIS FLABELLIFORMIS 
* „ AUR. VAR. 
*SABAL ADANSONII 
„ LONGIFOLIA 
* „ MOCCINII 
„ PRINCEPS 
„ UMBRACULIFERA, a noble and 
very distinct Palm 
SAGUS RUFA 
SARIBUS OLIV-SEFORMIS 
„ ROTUNDIFOLIUS— syn. Livis- 
tona rotundifolia, Saribus sub- 
g-lobosus 
„ ZOLLINGERI 
*SEAFORTHIA ELEGANS. 2s. 6U. to 15x., 
1 and 2 guineas 
* ,, ROBUSTA — SI/11,. Areoa Baueri 
STEVENSONIA SECHELLARUM— 
Phoenioophorium seohellarum, a rare and 
beautiful Palm, from the Island of Seychelles. 
Its bilcbed leaves are dark green, prettily 
maculated with orange, and tho stems and leaf 
stalks bristle with long needle-shaped spines. 
11) and 2 guineas 
THRINAX ARGENTEA 
„ ELEGANS, very handsome for ex- 
hibition purposes ; fine specimens. 
2, 3, and 4 guineas 
