264 
LOO CHOO AND BONIN. 
{Ruhiacem. 
1. Dasyloma De Cand. Prod. 4. p. 140.— Biforis Bengalensis. Wall. Cat. n. 
588. B. {in Herh Am.) 
Hab. Loo Choo and Bonin. 
1. Torilis Japonica. De Cand . — Vide supra, p. 189. 
Hab. Loo Choo. — We scarcely see how this species differs from small specimens of the European T. 
Anthriscus. 
1. Daucus Carota. Linn. 
Hab. Loo Choo. 
Ord. XXVI. CAPRIFOLIACE^. Juss. 
1. Lonicera ; tota glabra, ramis volubilibus, foliis petiolatis ovatls acutiusculis 
integris supra lucidis subtus pallidis, pedunculis axillaribus petiole fere brevioribus bifloris, 
corollee tubo gracili folio duplo breviore. 
Hab. Loo Choo. — This is very closely allied in habit to L. chinensis, but the branches and leaves are 
perfectly glabrous. In character it resembles L. longijiora, but there the flower is very long. 
Ord. XXVII. RUBIACE^. Juss. 
1. Mussaenda glabra. VaJil, — Wight et Arn. 1. c.p. 393. 
Hab. Loo Choo. 
1. Gardenia radicans. “ Thunb. Diss. Gard. n. l.t. 1 . /. 1.” De Cand. Prod. 4. p. 379. 
Hab. Bonin and Loo Choo. — This differs principally from G. fragrans in the shape of the leaves. 
1. Stylocoryne racemosa. Cav. Ic. 4. t. 368. De Cand. Prod. 4. p. 377. 
Hab. Loo Choo. 
2. Stylocoryne Webera, A. Rich. — Wight et Arn. 1. c. p. 401. — Cupia corymbosa. De 
Cand. Prod. 4. p. 394. 
Hab. Bonin. — Although the specimens be very imperfect, they obviously belong to this genus, and 
apparently to the present species. 
1. Hedyotis (Diplophragma) multijlora. Cav. Ic. 6. t, 574. yi 2? 
Hab. Bonin. — The only specimen in the collection has no flowers, but the remains of a few old capsules, 
which enable us to refer it to the neighbourhood of H. Lawsonia and H. fruiicosa ; our plant is con- 
siderably branched, and is probably shrubby at the bottom of the stem. 
2. Hedyotis biflora. Brown , — Wight et Arn. 1. c. p. 413. — Var. ? parvifolia ; foliis 
minoribus spathulato-oblongis subcoriaceis, radice subperenni.— H. ramosissima. Blume 
Bijdr. p. 972 ? 
Hab. Loo Choo. — The largest leaves are only about three-fourths of an inch long, and two and a half 
lines broad. The capsule and inflorescence are precisely as in the usual form. Had Chamisso and Schlech- 
tendahl not described their Gerontogea racemosa with lanceolate and acuminated leaves, we should have rather 
referred it to the Loo Choo variety of this species, than to Hed. ( Oldenlandia) racemosa. Hedyotis bifiora, 
