s 
INDIAN 
VAR. minor, FI. Brit. Ind. I. c. 
Smaller in all its parts, leaves 2-3 in. long, lip more infundibular, 
capsule I in. 
Kumaon, alt. 8,000 ft. 
4. I. Thomsoni, Hk.f. : FI. Brit. Ind. i. 469. 
Kumaon to Kashmir and Hazara, alt. 5,000-12.000 ft. — Extends 
eastward to Sikkim. 
VAR. eealcarata- 
Dhurmsala, Laka, alt, 11,000 ft. 
5. I. amplexicaulis, Edgew, : FL Brit. Ind. i. 469. 
Kumaon to Sirmore, alt. 6,000-12,000 ft. 
6. 1 * bicornuta, Wall. .* FI. Brit, Ind, i. 475. 
Kumaon and Garhwal, alt. 9,000-10,000 ft. — Extends eastwards to 
Sikkim. 
7. 1 . bicolor, Royle. I, amphorata, 1 . umbrosa and I. pallens, Edgew.: 
FI, Brit, Ind. i. 475. 
Kumaon to Kashmir and Hazara, alt. 4,000-60,000 ft. — Extends 
eastward to Central Nepal. 
This and /. Thomwni are perhaps the most common Balsams in 
the Western HiTnaiaya. The lip varies greatly in form, from saccate 
with a short Incurved spur, to infundibular with a very slender much 
longer spur. 
8. 1 . Lemanni, Hk. /. T, in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. iv. (i860) 
154 ; Aitch. l.c. xix (1882) 155 (Lehmanni). 
Kurrum valley,* margins of stoney streams, alt. 6,000-8,000 ft. 
First described from specimens collected by Griffith at Otipore in 
Affghanistan. The plant collected by Aitchison in the Kurram 
valley is, I think, the same, but more and better specimens are 
wanted for comparison. Aitchison describes two species as inhabit- 
the Kurram valley; one he refers to I. Lemanni^ which ascends 
to the lower limit of the other, which he refers to /. amphorata^ Edgew. 
(A hicolor Royle) : the latter however differs greatly from L am- 
phoratUi and approaches very closely to /. Thomsoni; it is my/. 
Aitchisoniy see below. The trans-Indus species of Impatiens are 
very imperfectly known. 
P. I. violoides, Edgew, MS, in Herb. Oxon. 
Between Pikha and Janglig (Kumaon ?), October, 1834. 
