OF THE EASTERN HIMALAYA. 
267 
radiate arrangement of rigid peduncles terminated by 1-3 almost sessile 
clustered fruits which are somewhat longer than broad. Lower leaves 
are not whitened beneath ; nor are the upper leaves reduced to linear 
segments, as in P. Ilookeri. 
Another plant occurring both in the Sikkim and Bhutan Himalaya 
presents a very different appearance to Pinqnnella Hooketi but is I 
believe referable to that species. In this variety all the leaves have the 
segments very long narrow-linear. The characters of flower and fruit 
are quite according to type. I have found the plant in the field mixed 
with true P. Ilookeri and I have no doubt it is merely a variety. I 
have named it P. Hookeri Benth. var. graijiinifolia (var. nov.) Bhutan 
Himalaya at Pun-ka-bee-see-moo No. 217 Dungboo ! Sikkim 
Himalaya at Yakcha, Lachung Valley, 10,000 ft., No. 2714? Smith and 
Cave! Zemu Valley, 9-10,000 ft., and Cave! also Gammie ! 
and King^s Coll ! without definite locality. 
Order— HI- eiACE.I::. 
IJiicaiia Hiacrophylia Wall. 
At Rungbee, l,G()IM’t., No. Smith ! an addition to the Flora 
of Sikkim. Distribution— North Bengal, Bhutan, Assam, Burma. 
Order— C'OMTOS rr.E. 
Seiifcio ariiieoides Wall. 
Above Lachen, 12,000 f( ., No. 3018 littm ! 
An addition to the Flora of Sikkim. A Central and Western 
Himalayan plant, not previously recorded from the Eastern Himalayas 
and apparently very rare there. 
Order— CAMPA i^X^LACE.E. 
Cyaiiantlius Hookeri Clarke 
This species was originally described from specimens in ripe fruit 
only, collected by Sir Joseph Hooker in East Nepal. More material is 
.now to hand including flowering specimens from Sikkim, Tibet and 
Chumbi. The corolla is very small for the genus, up to 7 mm. — only 
half that of its nearest ally, C. injlatus H. f. & T., — narrow tubular, 
