

HEMIPTERA., 
rea, and fome others. It has not been determined whether any of the European Fulgore fhine in the 
night time. The genus is very limited, including the difcoveries of modern naturalifts. Fabricius de- 
{cribes only twenty-five {fpecies; of thefe, feven are European, and eighteen extra-European. Two fpecies 
are found in England. 
Chryfanthemum Indicum.—Indian Chry fanthemum. 
This is a very lately introduced {pecies in England. It is mentioned by Sir G. Staunton among the plants 
collected in the provinces of Shan-tung and Kiang-nan. Thunberg defcribes it as a native of Japan in the 
Flora Faponica, A variety of it is figured in the Hortus Malabaricus; and in the Herbarium Amboinen/e is 
another. We obferve a great diflimilarity between the figures of this plant in different works. That 
figured in the Herb. Amb. has very {mall flowers, {carcely broader than our large daify4: the leaves in cluf- 
ters, fome very large, and others fmall. In the Hort. Ma/ab. the flowers are twice the fize of the former,. 
and the leaves are placed much afunder. The flowers of our {pecimen are confiderably larger than either: 
of thefe; yet not of the magnitude reprefented in the plate of Mr. Curtis’s Botanical Magazine. 
This Chryfanthemum is not peculiar to China, though it has been long cultivated in that country. It 
grows {pontaneoufly in fome parts of Japan; and from the name it bears in the Arabic, Perfic, and other 
languages, is probably known in moft parts of Afia. 
1 Chryfanthemum Leucanthemum 

