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674 CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE BOTANICAL MAGAZINE.

viore bilobo equitante inferins, cujus lobus medius major indivisus, later alibus tectus. Stamina antJierifera inclusa : Antherae scepius dimidiates, cum rudimento nano lobi alte- rius ; nunc complete, loculis cequalibus divaricatis apice solum connexis. Brown MSS.

Jacaranda ovalifolia, antheris dimidiatis, corollis extus sericeis, foliolis pubescentibus ; lateralibus ovalibus cum mucrone ; terminali lanceolato. Brown MSS.

Jacaranda ovalifolia is very nearly related both to J. acut folia and /. obtusifolia of Humboldt and Bonpland (Plant. JEquinoet. tabs. 17 and 1 8), between which it may be placed. /. acutifolia differs from it chiefly in all the leaf- lets being lanceolate, and in having a smaller number of pinnae. /. obtusifolia is still more distinct in its leaflets entirely wanting the mucro, which is both obvious and constant in our plant, and in having a smooth corolla. /. BaJiamensis, Nob. [J. caroliniana, Persoon ; Bignonia caru- lea, Linn.), of which there is in the Banksian Herbarium a single imperfect specimen that may be supposed to be authentic, and /. rhombifolia, of Meyer (Flor. Essequeb., 213), which is probably not different from the plant found by the late Dr. Anderson, of St. Vincent, on the banks of the Essequebo, and cultivated in some of the gardens, under his name of Bignonia filicifolia, are easily distin- guished from the three species already mentioned, by their rhomboidal leaflets, and from each other by differences in the surface of corolla, which is silky in /. Bahamensis and smooth in /. rhombifolia.

J. procera, Nob. {Bignonia Copaia, Aublet, B. procera, Willd.), is sufficiently different from all the others in the much greater size of its leaflets, which are frequently up- wards of an inch in length ; in the rachis of the pinnae not being winged ; and in the cylindrical calyx, of which the teeth are extremely minute.

In five of the above-mentioned species, I have ascer- tained that the antherae are dimidiate, with a hardly visible rudiment of a second lobe ; a structure which M. Meyer (1. c.) has expressed by " Antherae simplices/' and intro-

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