NOTES. 
chinensis. Curtis’s Magaz. tab. 373. Inis fimbriata. Redouté liliac. tab. 
152. : ‘ 
moreoides. nob. in Curtis’s Magaz. fol. 1407, in nota; et supra in notis vo- 
lumini; 4to appensis. Moraa iridioides. nob. in Curtis's Magaz. tab. 
623. Inis compressa. Vahl enumer. 2. 137. Monma vegeta. Miller's 
dict. ed. 8; (non verd Linnai, ea enim Mor®a tristis ). 
Radix tuberosa. Folia angulata. 
IMBERBES. 
tuberosa. Curtis's Magaz. tab. 531. Ints reticulata, Marsch. 2 Bieb. taur. 
cauc. 1. 34, 
Bulbus tunicatus. Folia canaliculata, 2 plano bifaria. 
xiphioides. nob. in Curtis’s Magaz. tab. 687. 
Xiphium. 20d. in Curtis’s Magaz. tab. 686. 
lusitanica. 20d. in Curtis's Magaz. tab. 679. 
juncea. Vahl enumer. 2.145. Planta Tournefortii et Poireti ; ab insequente 
distincta satis. Exemplar spontaneum in Herbario Dom. Lambert. 
mauritanica. nob. in Curtis’s Magaz. vers. fol. 986. Clus. cur. post. 24. 
juncea. Desfont. flor. atlant. tab. 4. Exemplar spontaneum in Herbario 
Dom. Lambert. Pet 
alata. Lamarck encyc. 3. 303. Ints scorpioides. Desfont. flor. atlant. tab. 6. 
Redouté liliac. tab. 211. Iris microptera. Vahl enumer. 2. 142. Iris 
transtagana. Brotero flor. lusitan. 1. 52. } 
persica. Curtis’s Magaz. tab. 1. In1s caucasica. Marsch. a Bieb. taur, 
cauc. 1. 31, : 
Iris, although represented by a greater or less numberof species in all the four 
quarters ef the globe, has not yet been observed within the tropics. The figure 
which is found among the drawings of the Bengal plants in Sir Joseph Banks’s 
library, and which we had formerly adopted under the title bengalensis, is clearly 
either florentina or pallida, and taken from a plant- which had been derived from 
some uropean importation. ‘ 
SPECIES NOBIS MINUS NOTZ VEL INCERTZ. i 
acuta. Willd. enum. suppl. 4. odorata. Persoon syn. 1.53; very near to sibirica. 
sordida. Id. eod. loc. : pW s anrtbhilie: ENED | 
barbata. Id. eod. loc. 
elegans. Persoon syn. 1. 53. 
Iris fugax. Tenore flor. neapolit. 1.15. tab. 4; belongs to Mora; and if not, 
Mora Sisyrinchium with an elongated branching many-flowered stem,- an unre- 
corded species, and makes the second Kuropean Mora now known. 
We know of only one species of Inis from Southern Africa; viz. mor@oides 
from the Cape of Good Hope. In Northern Africa several have been observed, 
and only one Mora, viz. Sisyrinchium, though that genus is so numerous and 
various in the Southern parts. 
————— —— et 
VestiA lycivides. Supra vol. 4. fol. 299. 
At the time we published the article concerning this species, a compari- 
son of our plant with the figure and description of Periruracmos fotidus 
in the Flora Peruviana had nearly convinced us, as it had Willdenow be- 
fore us, that in spite of a curious coincidence between the general appear- 
ance, and especially between some remarkable features of the two, they 
could never belong ‘to one species or even genus. Since then a prototype 
sample of the plant intended in the Flora Peruviana has been remitted to 
Mr. Lambert by Don José Pavon, one of the two respectable aiithors of 
that yet unfinished national work; and the inspection of it has now left us 
without a doubt that PerreuracMos fetidus is the same species as Vesti 
co 2 
