34 CHILI. [ApocynecB. 
latis denticulatis coriaceis margine revolutis glandulis piliferis sparsis, racemis axillaribus 
pubescentibus squamulosis, calyce glabro, corolla extus glabra intus pilosa. 
Hab. Conception. — Apparently a large shrub, and possibly the A. phyllirecefolia of Persoon, but the 
characters of that species are very vague, and its flowers appear to be axillary and not racemed. 
SuBCL. III. COROLLIFLOR^. 
Ord. XXXVII. OLEINE^dH. Hoffmansegg et Link. 
1. OLEA. Tourn. 
1. 0. europcea. Linn. 
Hab. Conception. Probably a cultivated plant. 
Ord. XXXVIII. GENTIANE^. Juss. 
1. EXACUM. Linn. 
1. E. Jiliformel Sm. — Gentiana filiformis. Linn. 
Hab. Conception. — Two small specimens of this, scarcely more than an inch high, each with a single 
small, terminal and pedunculated flower, will not enable us to satisfy ourselves whether the species be dis- 
tinct or not from the Europtean E. filiforme. It is probably the E. chilense of Bertero in Bull, des Sc. 
Nat. 1830, p. Ill, but of which no description is given. — Belonging to the Gentianem is the “ Cachen-La- 
guen ” of Chili, the Chironia chilensis, Willd. ( Cachen, Feuill. Chil. v. 2. t. 35), but which is a true Erytliraa. 
The calyx, corolla, and stamens, in our specimens from Mr. Menzies, and from Gouan’s herbarium, follow the 
quinary arrangement. The nearest to it, as Kunth remarks, is his E. quitensis, only differing by the parts 
being in fours; but we do not consider that a distinct species. Though it be much used medicinally in Peru, 
Humboldt never saw it wild there ; but it was cultivated in the plains of ChiUo, the inhabitants of which may 
have originally brought it M'ith them from Chili, where it is undoubtedly a native. The circumstance of only 
four stamens, instead of five, being observed in the Peruvian specimens, is not, we conceive, sufficiently 
constant for a specific definition : we cannot, therefore, agree with Sprengel, who has, on that account, placed 
it in Exacum, without attending to other more important characters. The Peruvian name, too, is a cor- 
ruption of the Chilian one, which ought to be written as above, the word “ Laguen ” meaning merely a 
plant ; while the particular name of the present one, in the Indian language, is “ Cachen^' 
Ord. XXXIX. APOCYNE.®. Juss. 
1. ECHITES. Jacq. 
1. E. pubescens ; caule volubili ferrugineo-pubescente, foliis molliter pubescentibus 
ovatis acuminulatis breviter petiolatis, pedunculis axillaribus subsolitariis dense bracteatis, 
staminibus inclusis. 
Caules longissimi, volubiles, ramosi. Folia bi-ad quadriuncialia, ovata, basi subcordata, apice acuminulata, 
supra intense viridia subtus pallida. Flores ex axillis foliorum supremorum, subsolitarii. Pedunculi florem 
iequantes, bracteis parvis imbricatis ovatis pubescentibus tecti. Calyx profunde 5-partitus ; laciniis lanceo- 
latis, erectis, pubescentibus. Corolla tubo calycis longitudine, limbo quinquefido, lobis ovatis. Stamina 
inclusa. Antherce lineares, in tubum sessiles, basi biaristate. Germen ovato-globosum, didymum. Stylus 
filiformis. * 
Hab. Conception. 
