22 
DESCRIPTIVE LIST OF NEW PLANTS. 
blossoms are small, white, smooth, and arranged in one-sided 
racemes, which closely cover the very strong axis of inflores¬ 
cence. It is not a plant of much beauty. From Caraccas.— 
Bot. Reg. 
Zijgopetalum tricolor (Lindley). This has the smallest flowers 
of any species yet known. They are pale green, with a white 
lip, banded with broken lines of crimson. From Guayana.— 
Bot. Reg. 
Epidendrum ( Encyclium ) subaquilum (Lindley). A small 
slender plant, with leaves seven or eight inches long, and barely 
three lines wide ; flowers the size of E. diffusum , pale dull brown. 
From Mexico or Guatemala.— Bot. Reg. 
Bendrobium ( Onychium ) triadenium. — This is a lovely plant, 
with the habit of B. crumenatum , but with a very close racemose 
panicle of flowers. They are transparent, about as large as in 
B. aduncum , nearly white, with a tinge of rose, a violet spot on 
the end of the petals and lip, and a three-lobed tubercle in the 
middle of the latter. What seems to be a variety, with colourless 
flowers, has also come under my observation.— Bot. Reg. 
Begonia fuchsioides. Terminally from its branches and most 
robust branchlets proceed the rich scarlet, very pretty, drooping 
flowers of this plant, which resemble the blossoms of a Fuchsia as 
closely as those of a Begonia possibly can do. It has been raised 
by Messrs. Yeitch, of Exeter.— Mag. Bot. 
Oncidium unguiculatum. The pseudo-bulbs of this species are 
oval, two or three inches long, and its leaves about a foot in length. 
From the former ascend the flower-scapes several feet, bearing 
numerous flowers scattered over their branches, that have yellow¬ 
ish, spotted with brown, sepals and petals, and a large, bright, 
clear yellow three-lobed lip. It is one of the many importations 
that have been sold of late in London. G. B. Warner, esq., 
exhibited a fine specimen in flower at a recent meeting of the 
Horticultural Society.— Mag. Bot. 
