Darwal
Darwal
Darwal
LINNEAN SOCIETY.
VOL. III. No.9.
CONTENTS.
Page!
I. Zoological Papers.
1. On the Importance of fill h'xamination of the Structure of tbo
. ' Integwneut of Orustacea in tho determination of doubtful
Spccie.s.-Application to the genus Galatllea, wilh the De-
scril)tion of a New Speeies oftbal Genus. By C. SPENOE BATE,
Esq., F.L,S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
2. Catalogue of Hymenopterous Insecta coUcetoo at Celebes by
Mr. A. R. WALLACE. By FREDE1/:[CX SanTu, Esq., Assist-
ant in the Zoologienl Dc-partlllcnt, British Musenm. Com-
municated by"'. 'V. SAnnu:ns, E:lq., F.R.S., V .P.L.S.. . 4
3. Descri}Jtion of a. uow Genus of Crustacea, of the Family Pinne-
theridre; in which the fifth pair of legs arc reduced to au
almost imperceptible rudiment. By 'fnoHAS BELL, Esq.,
Pres. L.S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
4. Death of the Common Hive Bee, supposed to be occasioned
by n. parasitic Fungus. By tho Rev. ITENRY JIIGGINS.
Communicated by the PREsIDBNT . . . . . . . . . 29
5. N otioo of the occurrence of recent Worm Tracks in tho Upper
Part of the London Cluy Formation ncar lIighgate. By
JOHN 1V. W;ETIlERELL, Esq. Communicated by J.uaS
YATES, Esq., M.A.., F.L.S. . . . . . . . . . . . 31
6. Natural-History Exl:ra('ta fl'om the Journal of Captain Den·
ham, !I.M. Surveying V l's:lcl (Horil.ld,' 1857. Commwlica.tod
by Captain Vtj' ASIDNO'fON, through tho Seeretary . . . . 32
7. OJI some points ill UIO AnatOlllY of Nautilus PQmpiliu8. By
T.ll.lImo.xy, E!lq., F.R.S., Professor of Nnturnl History,
Government School of Mines. . . • . . . . . . . 36
R. On tho 'rendcney of Species to form Varieties; und on thePor_
pctua~oD of Varieties and Species by Nuturnl :Means of
Smoetion. By CUARLES DmWIl', Esq., F.R.S., F.L.S. &
F.G.S., BIld .AJ;PBED R. WALLACH, Esq. Communicated by
Sir CIIA.BLES LYELL, F.R.S., F.L.S., lmd J. D. liOOKER,
E.q., M.D., V.P.R.S., F.L.S., &C. • • • . • • • 45
II. Botanical Papers.
1. Contributions toO the Orchidolo~ of India.-N? II. By
Professor LINDLEY, F .R.S., ILL.S., &C. (continued from
vol. i. p. 190). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
2. A Note upon PSEUDOCHNTlltTlf, a New Genua of Orckidacea.
By Professor LlNDLEI', F.R.S., F .L.S. . . . . . . . 63
I' LONDON;
LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, LONGJ\11\1iS & ROJ3EUTS,
Al<D
WILLIAMS AND NORGATE.
1858.
JOURNAL OF THE PROCEEDINGS
OP THE
,-- - -
OF THE INTEGUMENT OF CRUSTA.CEA.. 8
.- _.- ',.
4 MR. sunil's CATALOGUE OF llY},fENOPTEItOliS INSECTS
Galathca ",jth short rostrulU, armed on each side with 4 teeth. the two
posterior being less important than the two anterior. The fingers of
the chelle impinge through their whole lcD~th; outer mnrgin of the
hand furnished with 3 or 4 small spines.
Hab. Trawling·ground, Plymouth, common j Moray Frith, Scotland.
~L'his species unites G . .A:nd1'ewsii with G. nexa) and, I think, bas
often been mistaken for the young of the latter; but G. nexa,
so far 85 my experience goes, is a speeies peculiar to the north of
England, whereaa G. dispersa, I anticipate, will be found to be the
most universally dispersed, in deep water, of any of the species
known. It CUll always be detected from G. nexa. by the form of the
band and the manner in which the fingers impinge: in G. ncxa the
hand is broad towards the extremity, and the fingers meet only at
the apex j in G. dis-pe1'sa the hand gradually narrows to the apex,
and the fingers meet each other through their wbo]e length, the
inner margin of the finger being finely serrated, the thumb not.
It also may be distiuguished f)'om G . .dnih·ewsii by the breadth
of the hands, which m'e narrow and round in G. AnclretQsii, and
moderately broad and Hat in G. dispcl'sa.
By an examination of the textw'e of the integument under a
magnifying power of low degree, tlle surface of G. dispersa will be
Been distinctly to differ from that of any of the others; it is coyered
with flat scales, ft·jnged with short cilia. The length of the animal,
including the al'IllS, is about 2! inches.
- - -
Catalogue of Hymenopterous Insects collected at Celebes by Mr.
A. "R. W AI,LACE. By FREDERICK SMITH, Esq., Assistant in
the Zoologicnl Department, British l'lusemn. Communicated
by W. W. SAU]''llERS, Esq., F.R.S., }'.L.S.
[Read Ap,il 15th, 1858.J
TUIS collection of the Hymenoptera of Celebes is specially inter·
esting, as adding greatly to our knowledge of the geograpbical
l'nnge of many well·known species, .while the ndditions made to
the Fos50rial group contain many of great beauty a.nd rarity. A
new specie, belonging to the tribe of Solitary Wasp', Otlyneru8
clavicQ1'nis, is perhaps the most interesting insect in the collection j
this Wasp has clavate antenllre, the flagellum being broadly dilated
towards the apex, convex above and concave beneath . I am not
acquainted with any other insect belonging to the Vespidious
gl'oup which exhibits such an nnomnly .
. _---
COLLEGT.t:J) A.T CELEll.t:8. 5
·.,
beneath fulvous; the mandibles ferruginous. The legs reddish-
yellow. with the. coxa: and base of the femora black ; the wings
hyaline; the tegulre yellow, the nervures pale testaceous.
Huh . Celebes.
3. NOMIA FORMOSA. N. capite thoraceque nigris; abdominechalybeo;
marginibus apicalibus segmentorum creruleo fa.~ciatis.
remote. Length 5t lines. Head and thora."t black and very closely
punctured; the face covered with griseous pubescence; the c1ypeus
with a central longitudinal carina. Thorax: the apical margin of the
llrothorax. the margins of the scutelluw, and the liIides of the meta·
Faro. DASYGASTR.E.
1. MEGACHILE INCISA. lIf. nigra, rude et dense punctata, facie fulvo
pubescente; atis fuscis, segmentis abdominis marginibus multo de-
pressis.
'Male. Length 5i lines. Black; closely and strongly punctured, the
punctures confluent on the abdomen. The face clothed with fulvous
pubescence. The tarsi obscurely rufo-piceous, tile claws ferruginous;
wings (lark fuseous, their base hyaline. Abdomen: the apical mar-
gins of the segments smooth, impunctate, their basal margins very
deeply depressed; a deep fovea at the tip of the apical segment; the
head, thorax, and abdomen clothed beneath with short cinereous
pubescence.
Hob. Celebes.
2. 1\hGACHILE FULVIFRONS. M . nigra, delicatule punctata; facie
dense fulvo pubescente; thoracis lateribus abdomineque subtus fulvo
pubescentibus; fasciis marginalibus abdominis fulvis.
COLLECTED AT OELEDES. 7
Female. Length 7 lines. Black; head and thorax clo$cly punctured.
the abdomen delicately so and shining j t he mandibles stout, with two
acute teetb at their npex, shining and covered with oblong punctures;
the face, sides of the thora.x, and abdomen beneath, densely clothed
with fulvous pubesccnce ; the apical margins of the scgments of the
abdomen above witb narrow fn.scire of short ful vous pubescence; the
abdomen in certain lights has a mctallic tinge.
The male is similarly clothed to the female. the margins of the seg-
ments are dcel)ly depressed, and thnt of the apiea1 segment slightly
notched in the middle.
Hab. Celebes.
3. MEGACHILE TERMINALIS. M. nigra, capite thornceque dense
punctatis; abdomine pllbe nigra vestito; scgmentis duobus apicalib'us
pube alba vestitisj alis fU8('is.
Female. Length 9 lines. Black; the face with tufts of black pu-
bescence above the insertion of the antcnnre; mandibles very stout,
\
with an acute tooth at their apex, the inner margin subdentate, and
covered with fine cinereous pubescence. Thorax with black pu-
hescence at the sides of the metathorax; the wings dark fuscous.
:
;
I
Abdomen clothed with black pubescence j the fifth and sixth segments
clothed with ochraceollS pubescence above, that on the s.ixth nearly
white.
Hah. Celebes,
This species resembles the M. ornata; hut when viewed beneath, the
different colour of the pollen-bntsh at once separates them.
Fam. DENUDATA<.
1. STELIS ABDOMINAL'S. S. dense punctnta, capite thoraceque nigris,
abdomine ferrugineo; alis nigro-fnscis violaceo iridescentibus.
Male. Length 5 lines. Bead nnd thorax black, abdomen ferruginous;
head and thorax strongly punctured, the scutellum very strongly 80 j
the sides of the face and the anterior margin of the face fringed with
white pubescence. The posterior margin of the scutellum rounded;
wings dark brown with a violet iridescence. Abdomen ferruginous
and closely punctured.
Hab. Celebes.
2. CCELIOXYS 'PULVIPRONS. C. nigra, rude punctat.a, facie pube fulva
vestita; alis fuscis cuprco iridcscentibus .
.il. fale. Length 6 lines. Black j the head and thorax with larg(f eon-
.- - ~--
8 MR. SMITH'S CATALOGUE OF HYMENOPTEROUS INSECTS
Fam. MUTILLIDLE.
Gen. MUTILLA.
1. Mutilla sexmaeulata, Swed. Nov. Act. Holm. viii. 286. 44. ~.
Mutilla fUl.'cipenuis. Fabr. Syst. Piez. 436. 35. ~.
Hab . India (Punjaub, &c.), China. Java, Celebes.
2. Mutilla unifasciata, Smith, Cat . Hym. pt. iii. p. 3S.
Hab. India, Celebes.
3. Mutilla rufogastra, St. Farg. Hym. iii. 629. 51. O.
Hah. Inclia, Celebes.
4.MUTILLA VOLATILIS. M. nigra, rude punctata et Imhescclls j
capite abdomineque nitiws, alis fusco-hyalin is.
Male . Length 5-6 lines. Black. Head aud thorax very connely punc-
tured; head and disk of tbe thorax punctured; the rnetathorax
opake, with a central abbreviate(l channel and covered with large
shallow punctures; the eyes notched on their inner margin; wings
fuscous and iridescent; the tegulre smooth and shining. Abdomen
shining and rather finely punctured j the basal segment narrow and
carnpanulate; the margins of tbe segments thickly fringed with
silvery-white hair; the cheeks, sides of the thorax, and beneath the
legs aneI abdomen with scattered long silvery-white hairs.
Hab. Celebe•.
Fam. SCOLIADLE, Leac/•.
Gen. SCOLIA, Failr.
1. Scolia erratica, Smith, Cat. Hym. Ins. pt. iii. p. 88. 10.
Scolia verticalis, Burm. Abh. Nat.-Ges. Halle, i ..'i7. 61.
Hab . India, Sumatra, Celebes.
2. Scotia aurulenta, Smith, Cat. Hym. IllS. pt. iii. p. 102. 80. (nee Fabr. )•
. Hab. Philippine lstands, Celebes.
10 MR. SillTII'S OATALOGUE OF llYMENOrTEROUS Ui8ECT8
COLLl:CTED AT CELEBES. 11
Female. Length 14 lincs. Black nnd shining j head red above the
insertion of the Il.ntennre, very smooth Rnd glossy, with a few punctures
at the sides of Rnd in front of the ocelli; antennre black;~ the man-
dibl cs with n fringe of ferruginous hairs on their inferior margin.
'l'hOfJlX: smooth on the disk, which has a few scattered punctures at
the sides; the scutellum punctured and shining j the thorax in front
und the metatborax with black pubescence, the latter widely emnr-
gillate at the vel'ge of the truncation, the lateral angles produced j
wingli black with n bright violet iridescence. Abdomen pUllctured,
with the midd le of tbe second, third, Rnd fourtb segments smooth Rnd
shining in the middle; thc first segment with a smooth !:Ihining carina
at its base slightly produced forwards, the abdomen with a slight
metallic lustre. The wings with one marginal and three submarginal
cells, and one recurrent nervure.
Male. Smaller than the female, Rnd differs in ha,'mg the clypeus red
and the red colour running down behind the eyes, the nntennre
10ngcl', and the abdomen with a bright metallic iridescence.
Hab. Celcbes.
9. SCOLIA MINQTA. S. nigra, abdomine iridescente, segmentorum mar~
ginibus apicalibus flavo faseiatis, alis subhyalinis iriclesecutibus.
:ft1ale. Lcngth 4 lines. Head and thorax black and shining, with scat-
tere(l pale pubescence j the mandibles and clypeus yellow, the latter
with an anchor-shaped blnek spot. Thora..x: the posterior margin of
the prothorax anel the anterior aud intermediate tibia:: and tarsi yellow;
a minute yellow spot on the postseuteUnm yellow; the wings sub-
hyaline, the nervures fusco-ferruginous. Abdomen: the apical mar-
gins of the segments with a narrow yellow border, the second and
third uniting with a latcral spot; the sixth segment immucu!nte; the
apex pnle testnceolts.
Hah. Celebes.
--
12 M1I.. SMITH'S CATALOGUE OF llYMENOl"rEROUS INSIWTS
their tips pale; the avica1 joints of the tarsi blackish, the spincs of
the legs black. Abdomen: the first, second. and third segments with
a fascia of silvery-white pile at their basal margins j the ftlJex of the
abdomen ferruginous.
H ab . Celebes.
3. POMPILUS CONTORTU8. P. niger, cinereo-pilosus, prothorace ftavo
postice marginato j alis subbyalinis, marginibus apicalibus fuscis, pe-
dibus subferl'ugineis.
Female. Length 5t lines. Black; th e bead, thornx, and four basal •
segments of the abdomen covered with ashy pile; the 6rst and second
segments with their apical margins naked. The scape yellow in front ;
the fla gellum beneath, the labrum, mandibles and palpi ferruginous j
the joints of the antennre arcuate, particularly the apical ones; the
apex of each joint is oblique, giving the antennre a twisted appear-
ance. 'l'horax: the posterior margin of the prothorax angular and
with a broad yellow border; the scutellum compressed and prominent;
wings subhyaline with a broad fuscous border at their apex, the tegulre
yellow; legs pale femtginous, with their coxre and trochanters black;
the apical joints of the tarsi fuscous. Abdomen with a yellow macula
at the tip.
Hab. Celebes.
4. POMPILUS PILI FRONS . P. niger, facie argenteis pilis dense tecta ;
thorace abdomineque flavo maculatis, alis subhyalinis, apice fuscis.
Female. Length 4t lines. BJack j the face densely covered with silvery-
white pile j a narrow line at the inner orbits of the eyes, the palpi and
mandible~ yellow; the latter ferruginous at th eir apex. The posterior
margin of the prothorax roundecl and yellow; 11 minute yellow spot on
the mesothora."( touching tIle scutellum, the thorax and abdomen
covered with a changeable silky pile ; the wings subhyaline, their
nervures fuscous, a broad dark fuscous border at the apex of the ·
superior pair. A transverse spot on eaeh side of the basal margin of
the second and third segments, and an emarginate fascia on that of
the 6fth, yellow.
5.POMPILUS DECEPTOR . P. rufescenti-ftavus; vertice nigro, alis an-
tids apice fuscis.
Male. Length 6 lines. Pale reddish-yellow; the antennre slightly
dusky above; a black transverse stl-ipe on the vertex between the
eyes, and another issuing from it in the middle and passing beyond
the ocelli. Thorax: a black stripe on each side of the mesothorax
over the tegulre; the wings subhyaline, the nervures ferruginous, the
superior pair fuscous at their apex. Abdomen immaculate.
Subgenus PRIOCNEYIS.
Subgenus AGENIA.
Faro. SPHEGIDJE.
1. SPHEX PRSDATon. S. niger. rude punctatus. facie pube fulva ves-
tita ,; alis fuscis cupreo iridescentibus.
Male. Length lOt lines. Black; the head and thorax opake. Abdo-
men shining blue-black. The face with silvery pile on each side of
the clypeus, an(l sprinkled with erect black hairs. Thorn..x : tbe pos-
tenOI' maTgin of the prothoTaX with a line of silvery pubescence; the
metnthornx with a short ligbt-brown pubescence at the apex. and
thinly clothed with black hairs; wings dark brown. with a brilliant
violet iridescence. Abdomen blue-black, smooth and shining.
flab. Celebes.
2. AMMOPHILA INSOLATA . A . nigra. scapo mandibulis. pedibus. ab-
dominisque segmentis primo et secunda fcrrugineis,; alis subhynlinis.
Female. Length 8f 1ines. Black; the scape, the base of the flagellum
beneath. tIle anterior margin of the clypeus and the mandibles ferru_
ginous; the latter blaek at their apex. Thorax: the prothorax smooth
and shining ; the meso- and metathorax ahove transversely striated.
the scutellum longitudinally so; the legs ferruginous. with their coxa!
black,; a spot of silvery-wbite pubescence on each side of the meta-
thorax at its base, and two at its apex dose to the insertion of the
petiole j the wings fulvo-hynline with the ncrvures ferruginous. Ab-
domen: the petiole and the following segment red, the base of the
third also slightly red; the three apical segments obscurely blue. with
a thin glittering pile.
The male differs in having the legS black, their articulations only being
ferruginous; the head entirely black with the face densely covered
with silvery-white pile. The thorax is sculptured as in the oth er sex;
the petiole more elongate and slender, the basal joint black. the
seconel and the first segment ferruginous beneath; the rest of the
"
abdomen blue.
Hab. Celebes.
Gen. PELOP..flUS, L aw.
1. Pelopre.us Madraspatanus. Fabr. Syst. Piez. p. 203. 3.
Hah. Malabar. Madras. Nepaul. Bengal. Celebes.
2. Pelopreus Bengalensis, Dahlb. Syst. Nat. i. 94 1. 2.
Hab. India. Philippine hlnnds, Chinn, Isle of Frnnce, Celehes.
-
COLLECTED AT OELEDES. 15
3. PELOPJEU8 INTRUDEN8. P. niger j clypeo bidentato, tibiis anticis
et intermcdiis, femorumque apice, femoribusque posticis basi, tro-
cbnnteribus, tibiarum dimidio basali, petioloque rufescenti-flavis; alis
fulvo-byalinis.
Female. Length 1] lines. Black; the face with silvery pubescence;
the clypeus with two large blunt teeth at its apex, formed by a deep
notch in its anterior margin; the scape reddish-yellow in front. The
meso- and metathornx transversely striated; the wings (ulva-hyaline,
the nervures ferruginous; the anterior and intermc(liate tibire and
the femora at their apex, the posterior femoro nt their base. the
trochanters, the tibia:: with their basal half and the middle of the
brusal joint of the posterior tarsi, reddish~yellow; the petiole of the
abdomen of n paler yellow j the abdomen smooth amI shining. The
male only differs in being rather smaller.
Bah. Celebes.
Mr. Wallace says of this species, "A common house.wasp in Macassar;
builds mud cells on rafters."
Note.-In describing the species of this genus ca11ected by llr. Wallace
at Borneo, I incorrectly gave that locality for P . javanus . The insect
mistaken for that spel'ies may be shortly characterized as P. benignus,
length 12 lines. Opake-black. with the petiole shining; the meta~
thorax transversely striated j the wings pale fulvo~hynline, the ncr· :
vures ferruginous; the scape in fro'nt, the anterior and intcrmediate
tibire, the apex of the fcmora, and the basal joint of the tarsi reddish.
yellow; the posterior legs, with the trochanters and basal half of the
femora. ycllow.
4. PELOP,£US FLAVO-P'ASCIATU$. P. niger; capite thoraceque flavo
vnriegato; pedibus abdominisque basi ferrugineis; alis hyalinis, IlIJice
fuscis, nbdominisque segmento tertia fascia lata flava ornnto.
Female. Length 9 lines. Blnck; the clypeus yellow; the mandibles
and scape ferruginous, the former black at their base, the latter
yeUow in front j the sides of the face with a bright golden pile.
ThorlLx: the posterior margin of the protborax, the teguhc, scutellum,
and a qUlulrnte spot on each side of the metathorax at its base I
yellow; the legs ferruginous, with the coxre, trachanters, and claw-
joint of the tarsi black; wings fulvo.hyaline. the nervures fen'Ugi-
nous, a fuseous spot at the apex of the anterior pair; the meso- and
• metntborax transversely striated. the latter with a yellow spot at t he
insertion of the petiole. Abdomen : the petiole sligbtly curved up-
wards, the first segment ferruginous; n brond yellow fMcia at the
apex of the third segmcnt, the apex of the fourth with a narrow
obscure fascia; the abdomen covered with a fine silky pile.
Nab. Celt:bes.
Fam, BEMBICID1E, West'"'
1. Bembex trepnnda. Dahlb. Hym. El(rop. i. p. 181.
Hab. I1Hlin, Celebes.
]6 MR. S'MITn's CATA.LOGUE OF HYMENOP'l'EROU8 INSF-QT8
Fam. LARRID..E.
Genus LAnnA.1 Fabr.
1. Lana prismatica, Smith, Jour'n. Proc. Linn. Soc. ii. p. 103.
flab. l\Inlacca, Celebes.
I The male is smaller, and bas the four apical segments of the abdomen
black, the face. chccks. and apical margins of the segments of the
abdomen with silvery pile.
HlIb. Celebes.
t
COLLEOTED AT OELEBES. 17
This is probably merely a variety of L. simillillta, wanting the black
apex to the abdomen j it very much resembles the L. anathema of
Europe.
6. LARRADA RUPIPES. L. nigra, malHlibulis pedibusqu~ funs; alis
hyalinis, vellis pallidc testaceis; abdomine seneca-piloso.
Female. Length 7 lines. Black j the head smooth and shining; the
clypeus, the cheeks, and fnce anteriorly, covered with silvery pile;
the scape in front, the mandiblE's, and polpi ferruginous. Thorax:
the sides and beneath with a thin silvery-white pile; the legs ferru-
gi nous with the coxre blnck, the posterior pair red benCllth j the
thora..x closely punctured, the metathornx transvCI'sely striated j wings
fulva-hyaline. the nervures pale-testaceous. Abdomen shining, very
closel¥ anel delicately pUllctured; tbinly covered with a fine white
silky pile, which is very bright on tbe margins of the segmentsl which
are slightly rufo~piecous.
The male closely resembles the female. and is similarly sculptured and
coloured.
Hab. Celebes.
7. LARRADA FESTINAN S. L. nigra; facie abdominisque marginibus
segmentorum argentato~pilosis.
Female. Length 3 lines. Black; the face and cheeks tbinly covered
with silvery pile. 'rhorax: the disk very closely punctw'erl, the
metathorll.x rugose; the sides and the legs with a fine glittel'ing
scriceous pile, the wings subbyaline, their apie~l margins fuscous, the
uervures fUSCOllS. Abdomen smooth and shining, covered with a thin
silky pile. the apicalmargius with bright silvel,), fascire. only observable
iu certain lights.
The male closely resembles t he female. bllt has Lhe face 1110re silvery.
Hab. Celebes.
1 - -- - - --- - - -
18 !rn. SMITH'S CATALOGUE OF HYMENOPTEROUS INSECTS
sions, and the head much less compressed than in Larrada; the
recurrent nervmes are received nearer to the base and apex of the
second submarginal cell; the species have, in fact, a distinct habit, and
do not assimilate with the species of L arrada.
];'am. CRABROJ'.'1DlE.
Tribe VESPJDAl.
Fam. EUMEJ\'1D~, Wcslw.
Genus ZETIIUS, Fabr.
1. Zcthus cynnoptel'us, Sauss. ilion. Gttiipes Sol. i. 23. 2.
i irideseentibus.
Male. Length 6 lines. Black; strongly punctured and shining j a
minute spot behinrl the eyes, another in their emargination, the
clypeus. with two miuute spots above it, a spot at the base of the
mandibles, and the scapc in frout yellow. Thorax : a subintemlpted
, line on its anterior margin, the tubercles, a spot on the tegulre behind,
and the legs yellow ; t he eoxre, femora at t heir base, and the posterior
tibire outside dusky j wings light brown and iridescent, th e anterior
l margin of the superior pair darkest. Abdomen delicately pUllctured;
the apical margin of the fil'st segment with a nnrrow yellow border
slightly interrupted on each side; th e apical segments with a thin
cinereous pile.
Hab. Celebes.
I
4. EUMENES ARCHI'rECTUS. E. niger, clypeo, prothoracis mnrgillc
postscutello nbdominisque segmenti J>l'imi margine fl nv~.
Female. Length 6 lines. mack anti closely punctured; It. 1in~ behind
the eyes near their vertex, n spot between t he nntennre and the
clypeus, yellow; the latter blnck at tbe apex, which is notched; the
labrum and mandibles reddish-yellow, the latter black at their basco
Thorax: the anterior mllrgin yellow; t he tubercles, tegulre, post-
scutellum, an interrupted line on each side of the metnthornx, the
tibire, tarsi, and femora at their npex, yeUow; the coxre spotted with
yellow and the posterior tibire dusky.; the wings fusco-hyaline ; a
black line n cl'OSS the tegulre. Abdomen: no ovate spot on each side
of t he petiole, its npical mal'gin, a transverse ovate spot on each
side of th e first segment.land its posterior margin yellow j the following
segments covered with a grey silky pile.
Male. Differs from the female in having the elypeus entirely yellow,
the metathorax and abdomen ent.it·ely black j only the apical margin
of the petiole is yellow, it is nlso longer.
Hub. Celebes.
5. EUM 8NES FLORALIS. E. niger j clypeo f1avo j thorace pcd ihusque
ferrugiueo-flavo variegatis.
]l1ate. Length 6t lili es. Black j strongly punctured anel shining; the
clypeus and a spot above yellow ; a narrow abbreviated line behind
the eyes, a minute spot in their emargination, and the tips of the man-
dibles ornnge·red j the flagellum fulvous beneath. Thorax: t he
nntel1.0r all cl posterior mnrgin of the prothora.....;, the tubercles. and It
COLLEc'rED A'r CELEDES. 21
l'J]>ot on the tegulro behind, a line on the postscutellum and the legs.
orange-red. t he coxre black, and l he tnrsi dusky; the wings slightly
brownish with f1 violet iridescence. Abdomen immaculate, with a
minute spot on the posterior border of tbe Iletiole; the third and
following segments with a fine cinereous pile.
Hab, Celebes,
l,
COLLECTED AT CELEDES. 23
Farn. BRACONIDlE.
1. BRACON INSINUATOR. B. capite, thl')raee pedibusque ferrugineisj
nntenrus. tibiis tal'sisquc posticis et abdomine lligris; alis nigro-fuscis,
macula hyalina sub stigmate.
Female. Length 7t lines. Head anfl thora.x smooth, shilling. ami
ferruginoul:I, the legs ferruginous, with the posterior tibire and tarsi
blaek; the nlltennre black, with the scape and following joint ferru-
ginous; wings dark brown, with their extreme base pale testaceous;
a hyaline stripe runs from the stigma across the first snbmarginal
cell and passes a littl~ below it. Abdomen black, smooth, and
shining, with the lateral margins of the basal segment pale yellow-
testaceous; this segment has on each side a 10ngitudina1 carina, ami
between them is Ii highly polished bell-shaped fOI'I11; the second
~egment with deep oblique depressions at the ~ id es, aud deeply
.
COLLECTED AT CELEDES. 25
longitudinally I'ugose-striate, leaving the apical margin smooth and
shi ning; the second segment is similarly sculptUl"ed, and the t hird has
a transverse groove at its base.
llab. Celebes.
2. 13RACON INTRUDENS . B. ntfescenti-flavus, antenuis setisque CI\U-
<lalibus nigris .. atis nigro-Cuscis, basi fnsciaque angusta transversa flavis.
Fem,ale. Lcngth 9 lines. Pale reddish-yellow; the eyes, flagellulD, and
ovipositor black; tbe scape and the fol1owing segment yellow; the
head an(l thora.x smooth and shining, both pubescent at the sides and
beneath, the legs covered with a similar pale pubescence j the face
with au upright horn between the antennre, and a raised flattened
plate in front of it. Abdomen: the basal segment with the lateral
margins rruscd, and baving on each side an elongate broad depression
extending its entire lcngth; the three following with R.Il oblique de-
pression on each side at the base of t he segment; the t hird, fourth.
and fifth segments wi!ltinctiy margined at their apex; the ovipositor
the length of the insect.
Hab. Celebes.
Genus AGA.TIIIS 1 Latr.
1. ACATHIS SCULPTURALIS . .d. nigra, prothorace, peclibus anticii!l
mediisque ferrugincis; nbdomint~ lrevignto oitido.
Male. Length 5!- lines. Black; the mouth, prothorax, anterior amI inter-
mediate legs, ferrugino us; the face with two tecth or horns between
or a litt le before the insertion of the antennre, anel nnother at the ~ide
of each, close to their insertion. Thorax : the mesotborax with two
deeply imllrcssed lines in front, running inwards, and uniting about
the middle, and with two or three eleep transverse channels before
their j unction; the lateral margins of the mesotborax deeply im-
pressed; the metathorax ruggedly sculptured .. the llosterior coxre
and femora closely punctured; wings black with a hyaline spot in
the first submnrginal cell. Abdomen vcry smooth and shilung, with
n deeply impressed line on each side of the basal segment.
flab. Celebes.
2. AGA'rHIS MODESTA . A. rufescenti-flavn; antennii!l, vertiee. ubiis
postieis spice, t8.l"Sisque nigris; nlis fusco maeulatis .
:Female. Length 4 lines. Reddish-yellow : the antcDllre and vertex,
black . The mesothornx with two deeply impressed longitudinal
oblique Jines, and two parallel ones between them; the metathorR..'I:
reticulated; wiugs hyaline, with a dark fuscous stain crossing the
anterior pair at the base of the first submarginal cell, these hyaline to
the middle of the stigma, beyond which they sre fuscous ; a suhhya-
line spot at the apex of the marginal cell, and another beneath it at
the inferior margin of the wing j the posterior tarsi dusky, and the
tips of the tibire black.
I:lab. Celebes.
•
26 MR. S?oUTH'S CA.TALOGUE 01' llYMENOPTEROUB INSECTS.
I Fam . CHRYSIDID1E.
Genus HEDYOnnUM, Latr.
,I 1. HEDYCHRUM FLAMMULATUM. U . viridi-}Jurpureo lavatum; capite
thoracequc fortiter, abdomine delicatule, punctatis; alis fuscis basi
hyalinis.
Length 3 lines. Bright green; the vertex, two oblique stripes on the
prothorax, meeting in the centre of its anterior margin, a broad longi-
tudinal stripe on the disk of the mcsothorax. nnd the sides of the
scutellum and postscutellum deep purple. Abdomen: the middle
of the basal segment, the second and third segments at their base.
broadly purplc; the apical margin of the third tinged witb purple;
wings subfuscous. with their base hyaline. The head and thorax
coarsely and closely punctured, the abdomen finely so; the tarsi with
the claws unidentate.
Rab. Celebes.
Genus OHRYSIS, Linn.
1. CSRYSIS PURPUREA. C. lrete purpurea. capite. thorace abdomi-
nisque basi rugosis punctatis, segmentis ahdominis secunda et tertio
delicatule punctatis, apice quadridentato.
Length 3 lines. Bright purple; the bead, thorax. and base of the
abdomen strongly and coarsely punctured, the rest of the abdomen
fincly punctured; the disk of the thorax and apical margins of the
segments of the abdomen reflecting bright tints of green; the wings
subhyaline, the nervw'cs dark fllSCOUS; the apical margin of the third
segment of the abdomen with four teeth, the two central ones
approximating, separated by a deep notch, the 1ateral teeth more
distant. separated from the others by a wide emargination.
Hab . Celebes.
2. CHRYSIS INSULl\RIS. C. nigro-purpurea, violacea et viridi lavataj
capite. thorace abdominisque basi rude punctatis.
Length 5 lines. Dark purple, with violet and green reflections; the
face, legs. and thomx bencath, green; wings slightly fuscous, and
I
•
MR. T. DELL ON A. NEW GENUS 0]' CRUSTACEA. 27
iridescent; t.he head and tbortLX closely and coarsely punctured; the
base of the abdomen roughly punctured, the two following segments
much morc fincly so j the apical segment armed with sb:: teeth, the
outer ones subacute.
flab . Celebes.
3. CHRYSIS SUMPTUOSA. C. fortiter punctata, metallieo-viridis aura
lavnta; thoracis (lisco, abdominis segmentis secundo ct tertia basi pur-
pureis; segmento apicali margine integro.
Length at lines. Golden-green; the thorax at the sides nnd p~teriorly
with bright coppery effulgence; an oblong purple spot on the disk of
the thorax; the metatborax and its lateral teeth vivid ~reen, the vertex
and prothol'ltX splashed with gold. Abdomen: the basal segment
bright green, with a bright coppery 01' golden effu lgcnc{' llt the sides;
the second segmeut purple at the base, coppery nt the apex, and with
n suffusion of green betwcen these tints; the ·third segment is simi-
larly coloured, with the apical margin entire; the insect closely and
strongly punctured throughout.
flab. Celebes.
straigbt from side to side; the anterior and lateral margins form-
ing nendy a semicircle, the posterior margin straight; the orbits
are deeply cut in the anterior margin of the carapace, looking
upwards; the inferior margin wanting; the oral aperture much
arched anteriorly; the external footjaws with the third Q,rticula-
tion somewhat rhomboid, the fourth irregularly oval, and the palpi
three-jointed, inserted at its anterior and inner angle. Epistome
extremely small, transversely linear; the external nntenrue placed
directly beneath the orbits, the basal joints partly filling them
beneath. The antennules folded transversely in large open fosare,
which are scarcely at all separated from each other, and are open
to the orbits, the eyes lying transversely j the peduncles short
and thick; the sternum is semicircular, the segments separated
by very deep groO\Tes; the abdomen very long and narrow, the
first and second joint transversely linear, the third and fourth
united and forming a triangle truncated anteriorly at the articu-
lation of the portion formecl by the fifth and sixth joints united,
and which with the seventh forIn a very narrow and lineal' piece
extending forwards to the posterior margin of the oral aperture j
the first pair oflegs robust, unequal (the right being the larger in
the only specimen at present observed) j the hand in each as
broad as it is long j that of the smaller conspicuously tuberculated,
that of the larger much less so; the former with the fingers nearly
meeting throughout t.heir length, those of the latter only at the
tips; the second, third, and fow·th pairs of legs are long, some-
what COInl)ressed, the third joint tuberculated on the Ullder side,
the third pair the longest; the fifth pair is reduced to a mere
rudiment'l in the form of a minute tubercle inserted in a little
notch at the base of the first joint of' the fourth I,air, and scarcely
,liscernibl. by the naked eye.
Observation•.-The relation of this genns to the Pinnotheridre
is tolerably obvious, in the smallness of the antennre, the direction
and arrangement of the eyes, and particularly in the form of the
oral aperture, and of the extern:ll footjaws . I shall not, however,
enter upon the consideration of these relatioDB, as I am about
shortly to offer to the Society a review and monograph of the
whole of this family. The most remarkable peculiarity in the
genus is tl1e apparent absence of the fifth pair of legs, which can
only be discovered 'to exist at all by examination with the help of
a lens, In this respect I doubt not that the Fabrician genus
Hexapus, adopted and figured by De Raan, will be fouud to agree
with it, although it is VCl'Y re~nrka.ble tha.t the anomalous condi-
- -"',-'
•
REV. n . HIGGINS ON DEA.TH OF COMMON HIVE BEE . 29
1
I
]
I
I
~ - - ._-l l ~
CAPTAIN DENUAM'S JOURNAL. 33
dim'ii) , wrueh, wllen mixed with other meats, aflords a fine-
Havoruw soup.
On the islets are flocks of the Cape Banea goose, which Mr.
Smith informed me were only to be found in these straits in tbe
vicinity of Flinders Island, from Cape Banc. to Cape Frankland
(west about), and that they are readily domesticated, and hatch
from three to seven eggs, and afford an acceptable dish. lob-
tained alive specimen, which Dr. Rayner of this ship describes thus:
_ ." Cereop8is N()vaJ Hollandice, Body. about the size of a. common
goose; bill short, vaulted, obtuse, two-thirds of which is covered
by an expanded cere of • pale greenish-yellow colour, tbe tip of
the bill being black, arcuated, and trwlcated. N ostrUs lnxge,
round, open, and situated in the middle ofthe bill. Wings ample,
third qnilllongest. Legs long, light dnll-red, and naked to a little
above the knee. Feet black, webbed, the membrane being deeply
notched, gl'eat toe nxticulated to the metatnxsus. Plwnnge slate-
grey, with black spots upon the wings and back. Wing-feathers
dusky black, and edged at the til' with pale grey. Irides light
hazel. "
W e likewise obtained specimens of the following wildfowl :-
AVES.
A BRONZE-WING PIGEON, Phaps elegnns.
QUAIL, Corturnix pectoralis (Gould).
OYSTER- CATCHER, Hrematophus fuliginosus.
RING PLOVER. Hiaticula bicincta.
,VILD DUCK, Anas punctntn (C'U~ier).
GREAT GULL. Lams pacificus.
LESSER GULL, Xema Jamesonii.
MUTTON BIRD, Puffinus brevicnudus (Brandt).
SOUTHERN GANNET, Sulu australis (Gould) .
SMALL PE NG UIN. Spheuiscus minor (Temminck).
The Mutton Bird we observed streaming from island to island;
and I learnt from M!'. Benvenuto Smith the ·fonowing particulars
of its habits from his own observatious.
The male birds come in from sea in the mouth of September,
and prepare the burrows for the reception of the hens. The hen
bird does not make her appearance till about the 25th November,
when she lays and sits at once.
The Mutton Bird lays but one egg; they are employed rearing
the young bird until the month of IIfay, at which time the old
birds leave the yOWlg ones to shift for themselves; the young
birds remain in the burrows till they a.re starved dowll. amI then
LlNN. FUOQ.-ZOOLOGY. 3
• ..J
---------- ----
set off to sea, and are not seen again amongst the islands till Sep-
tember. The cock and hen sit alternately night aud day; and all
the labour of providing for the yOlmg is equally sbared.
There are at this date about ninety people living on the small
islands in II Franklin Inlet" who make a livelihood by gathering
the oil, feathers, and eggs of the Mutton Bird.
Upwards of 2000 gallons of the oil are extracted from the birde
annually; and altbough 300,000 birds are known to he destroyed
each year, they appear undiminished in numbers. The oil burns
well, and is of a bright-rcd colour.
I was presented by Mr. Smith with two Paper Nautilus shells
(Argonauta tuberC1do8a) found on the shore of Flinders Island
this BeasOIl, a eircumstance which he has remarked occurs but
every seventh year, when many hundreds are thrown up: the
shells are rarely obtained perfect, as they are extremely fragile,
and the sea fowl pick the fish out of them.
Our Bot.'lnic Collector, Mr. Milne, ascertained, from what he
obtained himself and from what we could contribute from our
individual visits to tllC islets, the existence of plants, which be
believes to be indigenous, belongiug to the following families and
genera, viz.
Amentacere. Umbelliferm.
Asteracere. Gramina.cere.
R-osacere. Juncere.
Geraruacero. Solanum .
Euphorbiacere. Geranium.
Myrtacere.
'l'csting the chances of fish refreshment at this anchornge, we
found little encouragement for hook and line j but the two favour~
ing opportunities which the weather allowed for hawling the seine
produced ns tabulated on opposite page.
Wefound the Reef Islands in this aound 80 abundant in rabbits
since Captain Stokes's forethought had set some loose u})on them,
that, in two visits of foUl' hours with but four guns, 100 brace were
brought on board:
I took care to follow my esteemed brother officers' example and
the system of introducing such productions, and obtained n dozen
couple alive for letting loose in Shark Bay.
[A colow-ed drawing of Oereopsi8 NovaJ Hollandi<c aceom parried
II Captain Denham's obs~rvation5.]
How many Trawl-teine, or book and line.
Locality. Ib.wl, and pbate Nature of
Natural Hitto'1 Namet. Common Name.. No. of
aorta.
Iweigbt.
Pounds
of O. Depth of ~... ter.
bottom.
West side .. .... 6 bawls with seine_ MugU ...... .. " ... .. ........ . ...... Mullet ... ..... . ............. .. ... .. . 23 28
Flinders Isl. ... t Hemirnmphus ...... ..... ..... .. .. . Ga,..fish ...•••. ....... . .... .. ........ . 10 5
Settlement ... 1 fathom Sand {PIatyCCPhalUS ..... ........ ..... Flat-head, small ............. : .... s 1 "~
Bay .. .... .. . ...
H.W.F.&C. ~
~4:'YJ on
.1Iat
and
weed
Raia .. .... ....... " .... .... , Sling Ray ... ............... .. ..... ..
lum ........................... ... Small fish of the Basse family ... Several
2 29
..~
x. so. M
Z
~
Range 10 ft. ... L.W. :Labrax .......... .... " ............ . Baa.. ...... , .................... ... 1 1 ~
...
",'
E ..t aid. Of} " hawls with seine (mar.). {MYliObatia .......... ....... . ...... Ray .. ........................... .... 11 375
0
Hummock ... ~ Mugil .... ................. ...... ... Mullet .. . ... ... ............ ....... .. 20 30 c:
~
Island centre ... 26 day. 1 t.o 3 Cams. Sandy beach Platycophalus ... .. ... ............. Flat·head ...... .. ..... .. ....... ..... 3 2 ~
{SiPhYracu& ... ..................... Barra.couta ..... ... , ....... ..... ... 1 1
':IBa
y
··:,·1 at ~ 600d
1 ... ...
1 ... J Soomoorcsox ..................... Saury .............................. 27 17
Sepiotcuthia ............... ... ... Cuttl.. fish .. . ..... . .... .. ...... .. . ... Several
'"
~,
36 PROF. HUXLEY ON SOME POINTS tN TilE
rior edge of the muscular expansion which lies between the sh.lI-
muscles and from the upper wall of the dilatation of the vena cava,
38 PROF. HUXLEY ON SOME POINTS IN THE
vations, however, and Van der Hoeven's figures, of both male and
female, lead Ille to believe that the peduncles of the branchi..
are perfectly distinct from one another.
The follicles of the branchial arteries are thus described in the
lCMemoir on the Pearly Nautilus:"-" They are sbort and pyri.
form and closely set together. To each of the branchial arteries
nre appended three clusters of these glands, of which one is larger
than the united volume of' both the others j and the larger cluster
is situated on one side of the vessel and tbe two smaller on the
opposite side. Each of these clusters is contained in n membra-
nous receptacle proper to itself, partitioned off, as it were, from
t he pericardium, but communicating with it..... The two cnnals
which form the communication between the pericardium and the
branchial cavity commence at the receptacle of the lesser cluster
attached to the superior branchial arteries, and terminate at the
papillm before mentioned, which are situated at tbe roots of the
branch ire. The pericardium and these receptacles of the glands,
when first laid opeu, were found filled with a coagulated substance
so closely com.pacted as to require a careful remO\~nl, bit by bit,
befor~ the contained follicles and vessels could be brought into
view."
Like Valenciennes and Van del' Hoeyen, I have been unable to
find ' any communi.cation between the four sacs in which the small
double clusters of follicles are contained, and the" l)ericarlliwll j "
and I hold it to be certain that the other four sets of follicles are
not cOllt~ed in sacs at nil, but lie 1i'ee in the" pericardium" or
posterior cha.mber.
No notice is here taken of the widely different characters of the
anterior and posterior follicles; and the figure gives both a similar
structure.
Valenciennes e' Nouvelles Recherches sur II? Nautile Flambe,"
(Archives du Museum,' ii., 1841) pointed out the existence of three
pairs of apertures opening into the branchial sac, besides the genitnl
and anal openings j and be affirms that they open into as many
closed sacs, which communicate neither with one another nor with
t he clLvity that contains the heart. M. Valenciennes indicates the
difference in the structure of the anterior and posterior venous
appendages. He seems to me to have seen something of the part
which I have described as the pallio-visceralligament j but I cnnnot
clearly comprehend either his figure or his description.
Van del' Hoeven, in his 'Contributions to the Knowledge of
the Animal of NautilI/IS pompiliu8,' 1850, confirmed the statement
[
j
Two of the anterior chambers, and the fifth or posterior chamber, laid open.
Naturol size.
a. Shell muscle. b. Ovary. c. Intestine. it. Heart,; iJ,'. its pyriform appendage:
e. Superior anterior chamber; fl. its follicles. f. Inferior unterior chamber;
f. its follicles. 9. P osterior chamber ; 9'. Follicles. h. Cut ends of bran-
chint arteries. i. Termination of "ena ellyn, k. Pnllio-visccrnl1igament..
44 TilE ANATOMY OF NAUTILUS POMPILIUS.
,
N~turn1 Size.
Tho pallio-viscernlligru;ncnt seen from below: torn on the right side to show
the rectum and oVIduct; cut through on the left; side along the dotted line
close to a: in the preceding figure.
a. Anus. ~. Ov~ducnl npc~ure. c. Heart. d. Left:. bl'anchial veins. B. Right
brnnc111al vorns. f. OVIduct out tlu'Ough. o. Ovary. h. Rectulll. i. Mantle.
k k k. Pallio-visecrnl ligament; k'. its torn porl;ion. The oval Ie aperture
for the siphonal artery" is soon to the left of c'1 und the right-hand style
in PiO. 1 pa88C6 through it·.
ON THE TENDENCY OF SPECIES TO FORM VA.RIETIES. 45
he repeats his views, and which IiIhows that these remained Ull-
altered from 1839 to 1857.
3. An Essay by Mr. Wallace, entitled" On the Tendency of
Varieties to depart indefinitely from the Original Type." This
wns written at Ternate in Februo,ry 1858, for the perusal of his
fi'iend and correspondent 1fr. Darwin, and sent to him with the
expressed ,,~.h that it shonld be forwarded to Sir Chades Lyell,
if Mr. Darwin thought it sufficiently novel and interesting. So
highly did Mr. Darwin appreciate the value of the views therein
set forth, that he proposed, in a letter to Sir Oharles Lyell, to
obtain Mr. Wallace', consent to allow the Essay to be published
as soon as possible. Of this step we highly aPI)roved, provided
Mr. Darwin did not withhold from the public, as he was strongly
inclined to do (in favour of lIfr. Wallace), the memoir which he
had himself written on the same subject, and which, as before
stated, Olle of us had perused in 1844, and the contents of which
we had both of us been privy to for many years. On representing
this to Mr. Darwin, he gave us permission to make what use we
thought proper of his memoir, &c. j and in adopting our present
co urse, of presenting it to the Linnean Society, we have explained
to him that we are not solely cOllsidering the relative claims to
priority of himself and his friend, but the interests of science
generally j for we feel it to be desirable that views founded on a
wide deductioll from facts, and matw-ed by years of reflection,
I should cOllstitute at once a goal from which others may start,
( and that, while the scientific world is waiting for the appearance
of Mr. Darwin's complete work, some of the leading results of his
labotU"S, as well as those of his able correspondent, should together
be laid before the public.
Ir We bave the honour to be yours very obediently,
ClIA.RLES LYELL.
JOB. D. HOOKER.
J. J. Bennett, Esq., .,
Sec1'eta1'!1 of tlte Li'lmean Society.
i
,!'ENDENOY O}' Sl'l':CIES 1'0 l:"ORM VARIETn:S. 47
..
-.
(tllRt is, if the cbeck to increase fell chiefiyon the sceds), those
seeds which were provided with ever so little more down, would
in tho long run be most disseminated; hence n. grenter number of
seeds thus formed would germinate, nnd would tend to produce
plrults inheriting the slightly better-adapted dowu·.
Desides this natural meaus of selectioll, by which those indi-
viduals are l)reserved, whether in their egg, or la.rval, 0 1' mature
state, which are best adapted to the place they fill in nature,
there is a second agency at wOl'k in most unisexual animals,
tending to produce t he same effect, namely, the stl'ugglc of t he
males f Ot' t he females. 'l'hesc struggles nre generally decided
by tho law of battle, but in thc case of birds, apparcntly, by the
charms of their Bong, by theil' beauty 01' their l)owor of' court-
sbjp, as ill the dancing rock-thrush of Guitwa. The most vigor-
ous and healthy m,lles, implying perfect adaptation, must gene-
rally gain the victory in theu' contests. This kind of sele·ction,
however, is less rigorous than the other j it does not require the
death of the less successful, but gives to them fewer descendants.
The struggle falls, moreover, at a time of year when food is gene·
rally abundant, and perhaj)s tbe eft'ect chiefly produced would be
the modification of the secondary sexual characters, which flre not
related to the power of obtaining food, or to defence from enemies,
but to fighting with or rivalling other males. The result of this
struggle amongst the males may be compared in some respects
to that produced by those agriculturists who pay less attention
to the careful selection of nll their young animals, aud more to
the occasiona.l use of a choice mnte.
not but that I believe most beings vary at all times enough for
selection to nct on them. Some of its inhabitnnts will be cxtenni·
nn.ted j and the remainder will be exposed to the mutual action of
a different set of inhabitants, which I believe to be far more im-
portant to the life of each being than mere climate. Considering
the infinitely various method. which living beings follow to obtain
food by struggling with other organisms, to escape danger at
various times of life, to have their eggs or seeds disseminated, &0.
&0" I ennn'ot doubt that dm'ing millions of generations individuals
of it species will be occasionally borD with some' slight variation,
profitable to some pa,.t of their economy. Such individunls will
have a better chance of surviving, and of propagating their new
and slightly different strtlctUl'c; {md tl;e modification mny be
slowly increased by the accumulative nction of natural selection
to any profitable extent, The variety thus formed will either
coexist with, or, more commonly, will exterminate its parent form.
An organic being, like the woodpecker or misseltoe, may thus come
to be adapted to a score of contingences-natural selection nccu-
ll1ula,ting those slight variations in nIl parts of its structw·e, which
are in any way usefnl to it during any part of its life.
. 5. ¥ultiform difficulties will occur to everyone, with respect
to this theory. l\1any cau, I think, be satisfactorily answered.
Natura non facit sallwln answers some of the most obvious. The
slowness of the change, and only a very few individuals under-
going change at anyone time, answers others. The extreme
imperfection of om' geological records answers others.
6. Another principle, which may be called the priuciple of
divergence, plays, I believe, an iml)Ortan t part in the origin of
species. (n1e snme spot will support more life if occupied by very
diverse forms. W e see this in the many generic forms in a square
yard of turf, and iu the plauts or insects ou any little uniform
islet, belonging almost invariably to as mnny genera and families
as species. ,Ve can understnud the meaning of this fact amongst
the higher animals, whose habits we understand, We know that
it has been experimentally shown that a plot of land will yield a
greater weight if sown with several species and genera of grasses,
than if sown with only two 01' three species. Now, every organic
being, by propagating so rapidly, may be said to be striving its
utmost to increase in numbers. So it·will be with the OffSpl'iug
of any species after it has become diversified iuto varieties, or sub-
species, 01' true species. And it follows, I think, from the fore-
going facts, that the varyiug offspriug of each species ,vi\l try
TENDENOY OF SPEOIE S TO FORM Y.AJl.IETI.ES. 53
(ouly few will succeed) to seize on as many an a as diverse places
in the cconomy of nature as possible. Each new variety or species,
when formed, will generallY,take the place of, and thus exterminate
ita less well·fittcd paT'ent. This I believe to be the origin of the
classification and affinities of organic beings at all times j for
orgn.nic beings always seem to branch and sub·branch like the
limbs of a tree from a common trunk, tbe flourishing and diver·
ging twigs destroying the less vigorous-the dead and lost branches
rudely representing extinct genera nnd fnmilies.
This sketch is most imperfect j but in so short a space I OOllllOt
make it better. Your imagination must fill up very ·wide blanks.
C. DARWIN.
of wholesome food is- almost the sale conclitiOll requisite for ensu-
ring tl1c rapid increase of a given species, since neither the limitccl
fecundity, nor the unrestrained att.cks of birds of prey and of
man are here sufficient to check it. In no other birds are these
peculiar circumstances so strikingly c0111bined. Either tbeir food
is morc liable to failure, 01' they have not sufficient power of wing
I to search for it over an extensive m'en, or during some season of the
year it becomes very scarce, and less wholesome subst.itutes have
to be found j and thus, though more fertile in offspring, they can
never increase beyond the supply of food in the least favourable
seasons. Many bil'ds can only exist by migrating, when their food
becomes scarce, to regions possessing a milder, or at least a different
climate, though, as these migrating birds are seldom excessively
ab undant, it is evident that the cOlmtries they visit nre still
doficient in a constant and abundant sUPllly of wbolesome food.
Those whose organization does not permit them to migrate when
11 their food becomes periodically scarce, can never attain a large
pOlm]ation. This is probably the r eason why woodpeckers are
IWIJ· , scarce with us, while in the trol)ics t hey are among the most
-
TENDENCY OF SPEOIES TO FOnlI. VAltIETIEB. 57
which the weakest and least perfectly organized must always
succumb.
Now it is clear that what takes place among the individuals of
a species must also occur among the several allied species of a
group,-yiz. that those which are best adapted to obtain a regular
supply of food, and to defend themselves against t he attacks of
their enemies and the vicissitudes of the seasons, must necessarily
obtain and preserve a superiority in population; while those species
wMch from sOllle defect of power or organization are the least
capable of counteracting the vicissitudes of food, supply, &c., must
diminish in nwubers, and, in extreme cases, become altogether
extinct. Between these extremes the species will present various
degrees of capacity for ensuring the means of preserving life; and
it is thus we account for the abundance or rarity of species. Our
ignorance will generally prevent us from accurately tracing the
efl'ects to their cnuses; but could we become perfectly acquainted
with tIle organization and habits of the various species of animals,
and could we measu.re the capacity of each for performing the
different acts necessary to its safety and existence under all the
varying circumstances by which it is surrounded, we might be able
even to calculate the proportionate abundance of ind ividuals which
is the necessary result.
If no\v we have succeeded in establishing these two pofuts-
1st, that tI,e animal population of a eownt?'!! is gtmerally stationary,
being kept down by a p8'1'iodical diftciency offood, and otlter checks;
and, 2nd, that the comparative alntndnnce or scarcity of tlte indi-
viduals of the several s-pecie8 is entirely due to their organiza.tim and
resu.lting habits, wllielt., rende1'ing it more di:ffiCl~lt to p1'ocure a
reg ,,/ar supply 'If food alld to l"'ovitle fa,. tlte;1' pe,.sollo./ safety in
same cases than in, others, can onl,!! be balanced by a difference VII,
the population wliich have to crist VIt a given area-we shall be in
. a condition to proceed to the consideration of varieties, to which
the preceding remarks have a direct and yery important appli-
cation..
Most or perhaps all the variations from the typical form of a I
species must have some definite effect, however slight, on the I
I~
habits or capacities of the individuals. Even a change of colour
might, by rendering them more or less distinguishable, affect their
safety; a greater or less development of hair might modify their
habits. )fore important cbanges~ such as an increase in the power
or dimensions of the limbs or any of the external organs, would
more or less affect their mode of procuring food or the range of
-
, I
I &pecic8, these ferming tho least numorous llud most feebly organ-
ized variety would suffer first, and, wore the pressure severo, must
I" soen beceme extinct. The Baine causes continuing in notien, the
parent 8peoies weuld next suffer, weuld gradually dimini:sh in
numbers, and with n recurrence of similar unfa.veurable conditiells
might also beceme extinct. Tho superier variety weuld then ruenc
remain, and en flo l'etw'll to' faveurable Cil'CWllstnnces weuld rapidly
inCl'enso in numbers and eccupy tho place ef tho extinct spe'cies
and yadcty.
The varia!;!! weuld new have replaced tbe species, ef which it
weuld be a mere perfectly c1evelopocl and mOl'O highly orgauized
form. It WQulcl be in all respects better :wapted to' secure its
safety, and to preleng itsindividunl existence and that ef the race,
Such a vnriety could not return to the eriginal ferm ; for that form
i8 an inferier ene, and ceulcl never compete with it fer existence.
Granted, thercfol'e, a " tendoncy" to repreduce the original type
of tho species, still tlle vn,rioty must ever remain prependerant in
numbers, nud up.der adverse physicul cenditiens again. alone ~'Ul"Vive .
. -. ,..
------------'---- --r'~---
I I
its body that is not called into daily and hourly activity; ther~ is
no sense or faculty that is not strengthened by continual exercise.
'l'he domestic animal, on the other hand, bas food provided for it,
is 'heltered, and often confined, to guard it against the vicissitudes
of the seasons, is carefully secured from the attacks of its natural
enemies, and seldom even rears its young without human assistance.
Half of its senses and faculties are quite useless; and the other
hili are but occnsionnlly called into feeble exercise, while even its
'; muscular system is only irl'cgularly milled into nction.
Now wllen a vnri~ty of such an animal occurs, having increased
power or capacity in any organ or sense, such increase is to·
tally useless, is Dever called into action, and may even exist without ,
the animal ever becoming aware of it. In the wile! nnimru, 011 the
contrary, all its faculties and powers being brought into full action
H': for the necessities of existence, any increase becomes immediately ,
available, is strengthened by exercise, and must even slightly mo~
dify the.food, the habits, and the whole economy of the race. It
, ,j creates ns it were a ·new animal, one of superior powers, nnd which
I !{ will necessarily increase in numbers and outlive those inferior
to it.
Again, in the domesticated animal all variations have an equal
chance of continuance; and those which would decidedly render a
'.' wild animal uuable to compete with its fellows and continue its
existence are no disadvantage whatever in a state of domesticity.
I,ll Olu' quickly fattening pigs, short~legged sheep, pouter pigeons,
. Ii and poodle dogs could never have come into existence in a state
of nature, because the very first step towards such inferior forms
! would have led to the rapid extinction of the race j still less
could they now exist in competition with their wild allies. The
It I
great speed but slight. endurance of the race horse, the unwieldy
strength of the ploughman'S team, would both be useless in a
state of nature. If turned ,vild on the pampa., Buch animals would
! probably soon become extinct, or under favourable circumstances
I !~ I might each lose those extreme qualities which would never be called
into action, and in a few generations would revert to a common
t~ II'
, type, which must be that in which the various powers and f"culties
are so proportioned to each other as to be best adapted to procure
foo(l and secure ,afety,-that in which by the full exerci,e of every
part of his organization the animal Can alone continue to live.
Domestic varieties, when turned wild, 1nust return to something
near the type of tho original wild stock, or become altogether
extutct.
1
' II !:;
'~-c.\: 1 '/ I
!rENDENOY OF SPECIES TO FORM: VARIETIES. 61
'Ve Bee, then, that no inferences as to varieties in n. state of
nature can be deduced from the observation of those occurring
among domestic animals. The two are so much opposed to each
other in every circumstance of their existence, that what applies
to the one is almost sure not to apply to the other. Domestic
animals are abnormal, irregular, artificial j they are subject to
varieties which never occur and never can occur in n. state of
nature: their very existence depends altogether on human care j
so far are many of them removed from that just proportion of
faculties, that true balnnce of organization, by men:us of which
alone an auimalleft to its OWlll'esources can preserve its existence
IlJ1d continue its race.
The hypothesis of Lamarck-tbat progressive change. in species
have been produced by tbe attempts of animals to increase tbe
de,Telopment of their own organs, and thus lll.odify their structure
and babits-has been rel,eatedly and easily refuted by nil writers
on the subject of varieties and species, and it seems to have been
considered that when this was done the whole question bas been
finally settled; but the view here developed renders such an hypo-
thesis quite unnecessary, by showing that sim.ilal' results must be
produced by tbe action of principles constantly at work in nature.
The powerful retractile talons of the falcon- ana the cat-tribes
have not been produced or increased by the 'volition of tbose
animals; but among the different varieties which occurred in the
earlier and less highly organized forms of these groups, those
always survived longest lOlticl" had Ute greatest facilities for seizing
thew' prey. Neither did the giraffe acqllire it. long neck by de-
siring to reach the foliage of the more lofty shrubs, and constantly
stretching its ncck for the purpose, but because any varieties
which occurred among its anti types with a longer neck than usunJ.
at once seow'clZ a fresh 'range of pastm'e over de same !/l'oWful as
tltei,. sltm·te1'-1/.ecked companioM, and {)1t tlw fo'st scardby of food
tvere tltereb!J enabled to outlive tllem. Even the peculiar colours of
mnny animals, especially insects, so closely resembling the soil or
the leaves or the trunks on which they habitually reside, are ex~
plained on the same l)l'inciple j for though in the course of ages
varieties of many tints may have occurred, '!Jct those 'races having
coloUll's beat adapted to concealment from thei1' ellcmiea would inevi-
tably ltu1'Vive tlte longest. 'Ve have also here an acting cause to
account for that balance so often observed in nature,-a deficiency
in one set of orgaus always being compensated by au increased
development of some others-powerful wings accompanying weak
62 ON TUE n'ENDENOY OF SP}lOI.F;S TO 1i'onlf VA1UETJE S.
/ .
.'
JOURNAL OF THE PROCEEDINGS
OF TilE
DENDRODnnr, BlOad:.
TIllS great Imlial1 genus va·ries extremely in the habit of its l1lt~
merous specics,-some being little largcr than the mosses among
which they grow, wllile others fire sm'passed in stature by fcw of
tlle o.rder. Like the Oncidia of the New ,Yorld, there are some
species of which tllC foliage is :mcipitous, others having jt teretc,
while in the majority it is in the usual Oat condition. A few ha"\""c
)]0 other stem than n wiry creeping l'hi7.0me; others have small
conical pseudo-bulbs; mnny form c1n,~ate horny stems, leafy only
at the summit; but the greater part l)t'oduce long leafy branches.
In the majority the colour of the flowers is some shade of purple ;
a few nrc destitute of all co1our except grecn; and a rather con-
siderable group is especinlly distinguishable by the rich yellow
tint of their blossoD1s. Of such distinctions advanta·ge has been
tn-ken in the following sketch of the entire genus, now consisting
of more than 200 species, of which I have examined the larger part.
In this all the species agree, that there nre only four pollen.masses,
nearly equal ill size, find of uniform breadth at either end. On the
contrnry, the Et'ias, which in some cnses hay€! been mistaken for
lJenilrobitun, have the poUen~masses pyriform, so that when, in the
LTh"N. PROC.-BOTL'\Y. D
2 PROFESSOR LINDLEY' S CONTR,rnUTIONS TO
§ I. ApORlTM, Blume.
• The ancipitous leaves clearly distinguish t his group from all
other Dendrobia. The genus O:cystophyUwm. differs in nothing
except having only two globose pollen.ma-sses instead of four.
n. (Aporum) siuuat'l(,1lJ, of the' Bot. Register, 1841, Misc. No.3,'
":..hich.has .quite tIie habit of Ox . carnosum, seems to connect the
two genera; for although it bas four pollen-masses, two are much
smaller than the others, as if rudimentary.. ..
'l'his looks like a very small state of n. Berm; but the leaves Rre
more distnnt nnd rather narrower, the sepals nre recnrved, and tho
lip quite different in form . 1'he flowers are not la-rgel' than those
of the sm.llest Oberonia. The whole plant forms a tuft little
more than 2 inches high.
75. D. (A.) anceps, 11Tallicl" Catalogue, No. 2020.
l.1:y flowers of this are unexaminable. It cannot be the n.
anceps of Roxbnrgh , which has lateral flowers only.
76 . D . (A.) LliNATU>\r: foliis scalpcl1iformibus clcnsis obtusinsculis,
labello lunato ante ungllcm cnnnliculntum C'ristn transversa instrncto.
Philippines, Cuming.
Flowers scntcely large.' than inD. (Ll.) Lobb;i. The lip is quite
unlike that of any other of the section.
760 . D. parciflorum J ReM.I.1rfSS. (D. Jenkinsi, JV. Griffith, in Calc.
JOtlrn. N. H. v. 367. t.25); an Assam plant with large wbite tenninal
f!owel'S, I have not seen.
77. D. (A.) subteres, Grijlitl. in Calc. Journ. N. H. v. 3iO. (Herba sup-
plex quinta species, Rumph. Amb. vi. t. 51. f. 27)
l\falnccn, Griffitlt.
Thi, is a very clistinct plant, ,,~th the long ,lender leafless ter-
minations of its .shoots yellow, polished, nntI remarkably ilexuose.
78. D. (A.) Roxbul'ghii, Griffith, 1. c. (Dcnd. Calceolum, Roxb. Flor.
Ind. iii. 370. Hel'ba supplex [emina, Rumph. -t1mlJ. vi. t. 51. f. 1.)
New Guinea, Hindes j AmboYll ll, Roxburglt.
Judging from tI,e account of tIllS plant given by Griffith, it
must be a vcry distinct plant, with " large dull.orange flowers
slightly veined with dull red." The lip, he adds, is represented
tlS almost 4-lobed, or 3-lobed with the central lobe emnrginate.
In my 'specimen, without flowers, the long leafless branches are
straight, not flexuose, nnd the distant leaves when full.grown are
thin, Ii inch long by fo of.n inch ,,~c1e. The figure in Rumpllius
makes them broader .
J
6 l.>llO}"ESSOR LINDLEY' S CONTllIDUTIONS '1'0
A. small species with flowers not larger than ill ail Oberonia.
The sh6,·t acute 'petals and lip are unusual,
--
l
THE ORCllWQLOGY OF L."iD IA. 7
§ V. HOLOOHRY .....
I Mr. Dalzell states that in this plant, "across the front of the
column n.nd below the orifice of t he stigmatic cavity, there is a
I small crest terminated on each side by a deeply.coloured horn,
two- or three-toothed at the apex." Tilis seems as if we had here
I also some monstrous structure j but I am unable to l'efer the plant
I to any of the Eudendrobin, unless indeed n. transpa1'CnlJ should
claim it j and I must add, that there was nothing unusual in the
colmnn of the only fiowel' I have had an 0J.;portunity of dissecting.
98. D. TETRODO~ (ll. G. ReM. in litt.) j caulibus floridis tenuibus
pendulis aphyllis junioribus foliis angustc lanccolatis mcmbranaceis
subobliquis. floribus geminatis. sepalis petalisque 1ineari-lanceolatis
aeutissinu..s, mcnto obsoleto, labello conformi pau lo majorc et obtusiore,
c1inandrio quadridentato.
J ava. on trees at the foot of M. Salak. Zollinger (11 ).
Of this I have a good specimen from Prof. Reichenbach. It
lias the habit of such a plant as n . t1'an~arc7UI j and there is a
slight tendency to the extension of the lateral sepals at the base.
Can it be a Pelori. of D . 1Ilacr08tac/'1lwm? I find nothing mon-
strous in the col umn.
99. D. normale, Falconer in Ann. Nat. Rist. iii. 196 j GrijJith. Not . iii.
255. t. 284.
' Vestern Himalayas j "M:ussooree nm1 Landour. Col. Vieary; pass near
Paoree in Gurwbal, at 4000-6000 feet. T. Thomson ( 17); SablU"UDpurJ
'Falconer ,
'I'lIE onOHIDOLOGY 01:' INDIA.. 11
My examination of this singular plant agrees with Dr. Fal·
coner's description. Although no monster, I am unable to indi~
cate the species to which it may possibly belong. Suspicion points
to IJ.fllTltbriatu1n j but that species seems to be quite an eastern
plant, while lJ.1101"1nale has hitherto been seen only in the W estern
lIimalayas. 'rhe late Col. Vica.ry informed me tha.t the specimens
which be first found, and from which Dr. Falconer's description.
Wila taken, were. gathered in 1832, in the vicinity of Mussoox:ee
and Landour.
B. Gaule elongato.
• Labello integro.
Thi. group consist.. of llumerous . pecie. 00 nearly related. to,
12 rllon:SSOR LI~-nLEY'S CONTRIBUTIONS TO
'.
:14 PROFESSOR LINDLEY'S CONTRIBUTIONS TO
J
·. ~
'.
J
16 pnOFESSOR LINDLEY'S CONTRIDUTIONS TO
longer npiculnte mentum, and in the blunt lip not at nil contrncted
in the middle.
•
20 pnOFEsson LINDJ.lEY'S CONTnl DUTIONS TO
§ X. CEn.'TODIUM .
Cm:PTOCllILUS, Wltlliclt.
145. C. SANGUINEA (Id.l; calyce oblougo bis longiore quam Into la.-
ciuiis acuminatis, l1ctalis labclloque obovatis n('utis, pollilliis Vil'iliibus.
Khasija, Churrn Punjce, Griffith, nt an elcvation of 4000-5000 fect,
J. D. H. 4' T. T . (200) ; Sikki m, J. D. H., Calkcart.
Flowers crimson. Capsule pyr iform, strongly and equally six·
ribbed.
146. C. LUTEA ; ealycc ovato longitudine ct latitudine roqunlibus Inei niis
triangularibus, petaUs Inbelloquc Innccolatis, polliniis lutcis.
:Mislimee, GrijJitlt.; D81j celing, Id.; Sikkim, Catlicart.
1'his very distinct spccies occm's ouly among my specimens
from Griffith and in Cathcart's dra.wlllgs, nccording to whjch the
flowers nrc of one uniform clear.yellow colour. Calyx much con-
tracted at the mouth, and not at all longer than broad ; petals
linea r-lanceolate; lip lanceolate. Pollen-masses yellow, not gt'een
as in the L'lSt. Capsule obscUl'ely six-ribbed. I can find no traco
of this remarkable plant among Griffith's descriptions or notes.
AOANTllorllUPIUM, B lume.
147. A. sylhctense, Lindl. Gen. 4" ,Sp. Orclt. 177. (A. ringjflorum,
Griffith, Not. l. iii. 347. Ie. 325.)
Sikkim, Cathcart; Kbasija, at. the elevation of 2000-3000 feet, J. D. If.
<\' T. T . (198).
Flowers straw-colour, freckled with red inside.
~I
22 PROFBSSOR LINDLEY'S CONTRIDUTION'S TO
ANTHOGO:NIUM, Walliclt.
148. A. gracile, Wall. Cat. 7398; RcM.jil. in Allg. Gartenzeit, July
I!
1856; Bonplandia, Oct. 15, 1856; Griffith, Notul. iii. 383, Ie. 345.
II
(A. Griffithi, R chb . f. in B onplandia.)
Khasija, gras.y place., 4000-6000 feet, J. D. H. 4" T. T. (199), LoM;
Assam. Griffith.
This plant varies in the breadth of the leaves, which are some-
times 9 lines and sometimes only 2 lines wide. I can find no
ground for the separation of .11.. Griffithi, whose originn.!specimens
are before me.
SPATHOGLO'l'TIS, Blume.
149. S. ixioides, Lindl. G en . ~· Sp. Orch. p. 120.
Sikkim, at nn elevation of 8000-10,000 feet, J. D. H. (146).
II Flowers yellow." J. D. H .
150. S. pubcscens. Lindl. 1. c.
Khosija, L obb; grassy hill. at 5O()(J...{j000 feet, J. D . H . (145).
I i "Flowers yellow," J. n. H. I fear my Chinese Sp. Forbuni
I (Bot. Reg. 1845, t. 19) is not distinct from this, which varies
greatly in the breadth of its leaves and the form of the petals.
151. S. pnrvifolia~ Lindt. in Bot. Reg. 1845, sub t. 19. (8. Khnsijana,
Griff. Not. p. 323, I e. t . 311. 1.
Khasija, on (try rocks ncar Churru. also in Assa.m, Griffith.
N . B . SpatltOglotti$? trivalvis of Wnllich's Cat., No. 3742, t11e
fruit of which alone is knowll, Prof. Reichenbach, jun. refers,
and probably with justice, to .I1.criopsis. Griffith's Sp. lilacina,
Not. p.325, Ie. t. 311. 3, is Sp. plicata i the s.,me author's Sp.
p licata is Sp. aU/rea.
AUUNDINA, Blume.
I CORALLOnnrZA, Haller.
172, C. lNDICA: flol'ibus subglobosis, sepalis pctnlisque oblongis requa-
libus seeunrus obtusis, labcllo unguiculato concavo l'eflexo lamina
1 subrotundo-quadrata utrinque medio nnidentata intus nuda .
r N. W. llimalaya; upper part of Hattee 1 T. T. (no number) .
I A solitary specimen, found by Dr. Thomson, is before me. It
bas no root, a stout scn.pe a foot high with two distant close-
pressed sheaths, a loose spike of 7 flowers, with linear acuminate
spreading bracts, the lower of which are empty. The flowers are
about t inch in diameter. The only :flower I have been able to
dissect haa lost anther and pollen-masses; but I think the plant
must belong to the present genus.
Tbe leafy Corallorhizas formerly publisbed by me I have now
had better means of examining. O. foliosa I have redissected; and
a second species, from Dr. Thomsoll, has proved to be in a good
examinable state. In both, the pollen-masses are globuln.r, not at
all compressed, and in the latter I have found them attacbed to a
true caudicle with its gland. It is therefore clear that they must
be separated from Corallorbiza lUld placed near Eulophia" n'om
wruch their pollen-masses distinguish them. A third species is
the Siberian Oorallarlti:a patens. The alpine habits of all lead me
to propose the name of Ore()rcltis for this small group.
188. C. hmcifolium, Hooker, E:cot. Fl. t. 51. (C. Gibsoni, Paxton, Fl.
Garden, No. 618, Ie. Xyl. 3011-C. javanicum, Blume, Bijdr. 380.)
Kbnsijn, at 4000-5000 feet. J. D. H. 4' T. T. (139); Mishmee bills,
lower ranges. Griffith; Sikkim, Cathcart; Java, T. Lobb (187),
Reinwardt (I< C. vaginatum").
This plaut has not appeared among the Hindostan collections,
but it seems to be common in the North-eastern Provincej:i, its
track then' bcnding downwards into the Indian Archipelago. That
it exists in Java is shown by the specimens above-mentioned from
T. Lobb and Reinwardt. Of the only other two Javanese Cymbids
that I have seen, one is a grassy-leaved plant allied to O. ewi-
foliu1n, the othel' is l)Ossibly Prof. Blume's O. cu~idatum j but
nothing certain can be said without examining authentic spe-
cimens. O. Gibsoni is only a balf-monstrous state of this.
CYnTOPERA, Lindl.
190. C. bicarinatn, Lindl. Gen. 4' Sp. Orel•. 189.
Griffith's 0!lmbidium, Not. iii. 343, No.9, is certa.inly this, and
it is to that description, not to No.8, that his figure 319 belongs.
'I'he description of No.8 has nothing to do with any Bpecies of
Cymbidium, Eulophia, or Cyrtopera.
] 91. C. CANDIDA j foliis oblongis acutis petiolo requalibus, brnctcis
::Iubulatis ovnrio requaliblls. sepnlis linenri-lnnceolntis. petnlis oblongis
npiculntis brevioribns duplo Intioribus. labelli tl'ilohi lobis Interolibus
ovntis obtusis intermedio subrotundo crispo npieulnto reettrl'O multo
Lrevioribus tubereuiis 2 l'otundis versus basin venisque 3 mnjoribus
carnosis elc\'atis .
Sikkim, Cat/.eart, J. D. H. (24 1).
COl:m orbicular, covered with coarse shreds. Flowers rather
before the leaves, greenish white, except the SCl)rus, which are
herbaceous. The base of the column is saccate, but the lip is
merely COlfcave. Anther flesby, triangular, stained with crimson.
In no dried state it is much like O. tricarinata.
192. C. fusca, Wight, Ie. t. 1690.
Nilgherries, J . D . H. (215 ).
Wight'. figure is a good one, except that the lower half of the
veins on the lip is represented as scabrous, like the upper llalf,
while in reality it is perfectly Bmooth.
193. C. flnvn, Lindl. 1. c. = C. Cullenii, Wight. Ie. 1754. no .doubt.
194. C. cllsiformis. (Eulophin exnitata, Reltb. f. in Bonplandia, Feb.
\5, 1857. )
Philippines, Cuming.
An authentic specimen, though but a single flower, from Prof.
Reichenbach, enables me to identify his E. e:caltata, which is eel'.
taiuly a genuine Cyrtopera. I am unable to find on the lip the
elevated keels which my learned friend deBcribeB. What I find is
n somewhat fleshy middle lobo, hollowed out like a spoon, and
compressed between tbe latera! lobes. 'I'hi. being smaller than
some other Cyrtoperas, I am obliged to change the specific name:
that of ensiformis indicates one main feature of the species whose
leaves are as long, straight, and narrow ns any Iris or Gladiolus.
195. C. squalidn, Rchb. in Bonpl. Feb. 15, 1857. (Eulophia squalidn,
Lindl. in Bat. &g. 1841, J'YIise. 164.)
Philippines, Cuming j Borneo. T. Labb.
I aBSent to the removal of t his from Eulophia, although the
82 PROFESSOR LThJ)LEY'S CONTRI1lUTIONS TO
S"-CCOLAllIUM, Blwme.
198. S. guttntum, Lind!. Gen. 4' Sp. Orch. 220.
Chittngong, Col. Fielding; Kamnon, in the Simni valley, J. D. H. (185);
Sikkim, in hot vnlleys, Id. (184).
It may be doubted whether either Saccolabiu", Bh,,"ci (which
is S. Rlwedii of Wight's Ie.), or S. mac1'ostackywm (Sertum, Orell.
t. 47), n.re distinct from this common species, notwithstanding the
difference in the form of the middle lobe of their lip nnd SOllie
other circumstances. At least I have from Java a plant gathered
by Mr. T. Lobb, which combines the prromorse leaves of S. 9"t-
tatttm with the short 'pil," and retuse lip of S. Blumci.
199. S. GURWALICUM; subacaule. rnc.1icibus mnximis eompressis, foliis
cnnnliculatis distichis tl'uncntis spicis simplicibus longiol"ibus, scpnlis
petalisque obtusis, Inbelli calcare late conico l'otundnto compresso
TIlE OnClIIDOLOQY OF INDIA.. 33
intns hirto lumina carDosa concava unguiculata subtl'iloba, fl'ltctu
ovali brcvi trialnto ligneo.
Gurwhal, N.W. Himalaya, at 3000 feet of elevation, T. Thomson (18 1) j
Gunai valley, KamaoD, Id. (185) .
.A. very distinct plant, nearly allied to.S. guttai'wm. The raceme
in my specimen is not more than 3 inches long, a.nd very dense j
the lateral sepals nre considerably larger thn n the petals and
dorsal sepal. The ripe fruit is not above n. quarter the size of that
of S. gutiatu,m, almost exactly ovn.l, and much hardeJ.'.
200. S. calceolare, Lind~ . 1. c. j c;,·iJf. N otul. iii. 356. t . 334. (Vnndn
pulchella, Wight, Ie. t. 1671.)
Base of Khasija, J. D. H. 4' T. T . (1 87) j Sikkim, in hot valleys,' ld.
(187), Cathcart; Java, T. LQbb. (339.)
A most variable plant, constant in little except the extremely
acuminate lwequaJ.-sided points of the leavea. The midclie lobe of
the lip is sometimes a mere ciliated rim, sometimes a. deep tJ.·ian-
grunr fringed plate, aud occasionally quito entire. The leaves
vary in breadth from !th of an inch, as in Griffith's figure, to
~ths, as in Hooker's Khasij a. specimens. The Java plant has the
l~aves less unequal at the end, and acuminate, und appe1!.rs to be
smaller than the Indian forms, one of my specimens not being
more than t inch bigh. In all cases the flowers would seem to be
spotted, with the sepals and petals fleshy and oblong.
201. S. obliquum, Lindl. l. c.
Kha,ija, J. D. H. 4' T . T . (189) .
A careful exrunm.'ttion of :flowers in spirits does not enable me
to point out any important distinction between this and S. cal-
C(}OlMe; so that t he broad leaves with very blunt ends aflord the
only available specific character. Dr. Hooker writes on his label,
II flowers exactly as in 188 (S. calceolare) , but larger and whiter."
:M:rCllOPERA, Dalzell.
225. M. mneulata. Dalzell, in Hooker's Joumal, iii. 282.
On trees near Tulkut, in the Western Ghlluts, in lat. l GO N., Dalzell, in
hb. Stocks. (25).
I have already stated that my genus 1YIicropera. must be reduced
to Camarotis. The present plant, which seems not to be referable
to any known genus, may as well, however, retain the name. ])1r.
Dallzell's account of it is good as far as it goes, describing cor-
rectly the very curious lip, which looks like a side saddle with two
horns instead of one,-the pouch, into which there is an opening
only between the horns, being almost concealed by the lamina,
which hangs down in the manner of saddle-fiaps. The column,
which Mr. Dalzell does not mention, falls back, is smnll, short,
semiterete, with a vertical rostellum pointing downwards, and
dividing into a pair of broad scissor.like blades. Upon this lies
a great oblong gland, to which is attached an obovate channeled
membranous caudicula.
N.B. Micropera viridijlora, Dalzell, is Saccolabjum. viridijlorum,
No. 217 .
STEREOCIIILUS, ll. gen.
Acaulis. Folia lorata, apice obliqua. Ra-cemi laterales, laxi,
flexuosi, pauciflori (hirti). Sepala et petal; Bubmqualia paten.
t issinia,lateralibus labello leviter adnatis. L abellum·solidum,
cnrnosUlD, sacciforme, facie superiore concava basi bicorni. 00-
W1n1l,(I recta, teres; basi baud producta, rostello horizontali
subulato. P ollinia 4, oblonga, onurino distincta, caudicufa. ae-
tacea, glandula. minutissima.
This genus is neal' Camnrotis from wllich it differs in its
J
solid bag-shaped lip with a pail' of horns at the' base, in its se-
taceous caudicula, and in the 4 oblong pollen-masses being per-
fectly distinct from each other.
226. S. hirtus .
Kha,ija, at 5000 feet, J . n: H. t T. T. (177).
Leaves narrow, rather more than 4 inches long by iths wide.
Racemes 7-S-fiowered. Flowers less than 1 an inch in diameter,
free·from the coars. short hairs that" clothe tho ovary and pedicels.
SOHCENoRcnls, Blume.
227. S. juncifolin, Blume,
SeelUs to be the only species, if tlie genue is clmracterized by
the two long erect fililorm processes of the colulUll. Otherwise
there is nothing sufficient to distinguish the genus from Sac~~
THE OROHIDOLOGY OF INDIA. 39
labium, to which Scltmnorc1tis panicu,latu and S. micrantlw certainly
belong.
SARCA'NTRUS, Lindley.
2'28. S. peninsularis, Dalzell, in Hook. Journ. iii. 343. (S. paucifioru!,
Wight, Ie. 1747).
Western India, Dalzell; Malabar, on trees, Jerdon (Wight).
Specimens of this from Dalzell OCCur in Stocks's Herbarium now
»t Kew; and I also have it in a very young state from Dr. Wight,
\vhose figure is by no means so good as usual. (Wight'. tln'eo
other Sarcanthi belong to Saccolabium.) Griffith's Sarcantkus
••cundus, Not. iii. 363, t. 336, from Suddynh in tho Mishmee
hills, seems to be this, which, if so, will no longer be merely a.
western plant.
229. S. pnUidus, Lindl. Bot . Reg. 1840, misc. 185. (S. tricolor, Rchb.
f. in Bonplandia.-Saccolabium racemiferum, Li"dl. Gen. 4' Sp.
arch. 224, no. 24.)
Khasija, at 4000 feet, J. D . H. ~. T. T . (178), Rlso found in Mr. Raban's
garden, E. Nepal, J. D. H. (id.).
This differs in no respect whatever from the garden plant.
Prof. Reichenbach's synonym is derived from a comnuullca.tion
from th.t learned Orchidologist.
COTTONll, R. Wight, Ie . no. 1755 .
230. C. maerosta.chya, WigM, l. e. (Vanda pcduncnlaris, Lindl. Gen.~·
Sp. p. 216.)
S. Concan, Dalzell, in hb. Slocks. (4 ).
231. C. Chnmpioni, Lindl. in H()ok. Journal, vii. p. 35.
Khasija, at 3000-4000 feet, J. D . H. <l" T. T. (190).
This seems to be in no respect dift"erent from the plant fouu(l
by Champion on Victori:~ Peak in Hong Kong, and thus nflords
another remarkable instance of epiphytnl OrchitIs occut'ring in
stations widely remote, without, as far as we at present know, any
intervening loc:aJity.
UNCIFERA, gen. nov.
Caulesceus. Jj'olia disticha, subcarnosa. Racemi densi, opposi~
tifolii. Sepala libera, erecta, obtuse carinata, requalia. P etala
paulo minora, retusa. Labellum infundibulare, in calcar 1'e-
trorsum uncatum vacuwn productum, membrauacewn leviter
trilobum, apice carnosuro. Oolumna teres, clecurva, npice dila-
tata, biaw'is, area stig matica horizontali prona. .a.ntl18ra apice
membranacea, elongata, bidentn.ta. Oaudicula maxima, carti-
lnginea deorsum callnliculata supra medium <lilatatn, apice in
falcem obtusam contra.ctn Cl~US acies labellum res-picit. Pol~
40 rnOFESSOR LINDLEY 'S CONTRIBUTIONS TO .
The only Indian species that I bave seen of tills African genua
is t he following :-
234 . A. ZEYLANICUM; subncaule, foliis laneeolato-loratis lobo alter~
npicis elongato snbfalento. racemis filiformibus llaucifloris duplo lou-
gioribus. sepalis petalisque ncuminntis requalibus. labello coc1l1eato
acuminato caleal'e horizontali c1a\'ato.
Ceylon. at Narnwelle, Champion.
•
Very li#.e A. caulescens j but the leaves are broad, 10 inches long,
with one of t he terminal lobes much longer tbuJ1 the other, and
V
I
the SplIT not inflated at the l)oiut. I have not seen the column
in an examinable state.
AmUD.E S, Lolt'J'ei1'o.
235. A. · Wightianllm, L indt, Gen. (.~. Sp. p. 238. (A . test-neenm, ld.
-Vnndn pnrviflora, Lineit. in Bot. R eg. 1844, misc. 57 .)
Ceylon, 'fangalle, Champion; Concan, Law, in M . Hooker. (1 83).
THE oncnrnOLOG-Y OF INDIA... 41
236. A. eylindrieum, L indl. 1. e.; Wight, Ie. 1744; Bot. Alag. 4982.
Nilgherries, J . D . H. (210) j Sikkim, at 5000 feet, Id. (2 10).
237. A. t reniale, Li1Idl.l.c. (Aerides carnosum, Griff. Not. t. 338 A.)
Bootau, Grij]itlt ; Khasijn mountains, lip to 3000 feet, J . D. I-l. g' T. T .
( 191).
" ]'lo·wers pale lilac,1l J . lJ. II. In the Kbasija specimens the
leaves nre from 4 to 5 inches long, andl to It inch bl·oad.
238. A. affine, Wallick, Cat . no. 7316; Sertu1'1l OrclJ. t . 15; Bot . lIiag.
t.40-19, bad. (A. roseum, Loddiges; Paxton, Ft. Gard. t.60.-A.
trigonum, Klotzsclt,jide ReM.f.)
lllains of E. Bengal aUll Assam, J. D. H. ~. T . T. (185) ; Assam and
Bootau, Griffith.
Among the many specimens I have seen, :flowers have occurred
in drooping and upright racemes, deel) crimson and pale rose,
with the lil) and other parts acute or obtuse, aU which are there-
fore marks of one and the same variable species.
239. A. odoratum, Loureiro.
Base of Khasijn, up to 2000 fcet, J . D. H . 9' T. T . (182); Garden of
SnharunJlore, Id.; Sikkim, in 101\' valleys, J . D. II.
240. A. cl'ispum, !Audl. Gen. <.:;- Sp. Orch. p. 239; B ot. Reg. 1842. t.
55; Bot. 1I10g. t.4427. (A. Bl'ookci, lfutematt, in B. R. 184], misc.
I1G.-Snccolnbium Sl,cciosum, ·Wight, Ie. t. 1674.)
Concan, Law. in hb . HookC'l·. (268); Dalzell. in hb. Stocks. (75).
Several vfl.l'ieties of this beautiful plnut are in our gardens.
The flowers in .L1.. B 1'ookei m'e rat her smaller than usual. .
241. A. Lindleynnum, Wight, I e. t. 1677 .
." On clefts of rocks bordering the Kartail'Y falls below Kaitie; also 011
rocky clefts on a high hill over Coolloor, flowering nearly the whole
year," R . Wight; Nilghel'ries. T. T. (208).
One of the finest of its order, the flowers being larger than in
either .L1.. cl'ispu11t ol'jalcatul1lt, and in larger more branching pa-
nicles. For this r eason the localities given by Wight are stated
exactly, in the hope that some collector ma.y send it home. In
front of t he opening into the spur stands a pnil' of large curved
t ubercles, which have not been observed in A. crispwm.
2-12. A. difforme, Wallick, in Lindt. Gen. tS· Sp. 242.
Khasijn, at 3000-4000 feet, J . D. H. <t T. T. (204), Griffith.
rnlis, which is the plant that 'Valliclt had before him, seems to
cliffeI' from the fonowing in having sman er flowers, with the
middle lobe of the lip only 2-lobed, the bn, nl one' longer and a
little undulated, and the leaves more tapering to the base. This
I learn in l)art fl'QPl cpref~ll disseQtiQu, and in part from one of
42 PROFE8S0lt LINDLEY'S OONTRIBUTIONS TO
V ANDA, R. B,·oum.
To the species descri bed in ' Folia orcMd.f1cea,' the following fine
addition to the section FrELDLI. has to be added ,-
245. V. UNOULATA; foliis disticbis obtusis bilobis pcdunculo apice
paucifloro tripla bl'cvioribus, sepalis petalisque recurvis mcmbrnnacei!!
lineari-Ianecolatis undulatis, labella breviare carnaso coehlento in
lammam linearem acutam sub apiee tuberculatam prodncto.
Sikkim, Cathcart, Ie.
The whole habit is that of 7T. 8patkulata and c",rulescens. The
flowers are fully two inchcs in diameter, with thin white sepals
and petals tinged with pink, and a yellow fleshy lip fnsciated
internally with red lines. I have only seen n. drawing prepared
by Mr. Cathcart's artists.
TA1NIOPllYLLUM, Blwme.
246. T. ALWISII; minutissimum, spica pauciflora erects, brnctei!J cari-
natis triangulis, peri:mtbii laciniis omnibus connati!! aculis confor-
mibus. calcare hemisphrerico, polliniis pyriformibus in glandulam
scssilibus.
On the broncJl of Il. SYlllploeo8, Ceylon, De .&lwiz.
The smfl'llcst Orchid I know, the flat roots not bewg more than
It inch long, and the stem, including flowers, ! inch . 1'he whole
plant is pale green, even the flowers having no other colonr. Mr./
Th'waites, who sent me it drawing of it (and I have seen nothing
more), proposed to call it Alwisia mitnuta, after his excellent native
draughtsman, who was the first to discover it j and if the figures
in DILUne and the Xenia represent the invariable characters of
l'rouiopbyllulll, this and IJend-rohiwm algo8wm of Reinwardt's MSS.
ought to be distinguished j but Prof. Reichenbach, jun., who has
had the opportunity of examining 'frenio})hylla, assures me that
this is one, and I possess no materials 011 which to form au opinion
for myseU·.
TIlE OnOlUDOLOGY OF INDIA..
HERMINIUM, R. Br.
~49 . U. monorchis, Id.
-N.'V. Himalaya, 8000-12.000 feet, T. T. (263); Nutrn, W·. Thibet,
11,000 feet, ld.
250. H. congestum, Lindl. Gen. 4' Sp. arch. p. 305. (H. llnalasch~
kense, .Rchb.f. Orch. Ft. Germ. ». 107, t. 65, excluding the syn. of
P latllntbera Schischmareffinna.)
Sikkim, 11,000-12,000 feet, J. D. H. (265).
Differs from H . 'I1wncrchis in its erect blunt obovate.Iimceolate
leaves and entire lip.
Swartz.
SA..TYRIUM,
§ I. OONCIIIDIU>I, Grijfitl,.
This group bears the closest analogy to the second section of
Stacbyobium among Dendl'obia, like it, consisting of sman stem.
less species, with round or depressed pseudo.bulbs, membranous
leaves, and flowers solitary or in few·fiowered racemes, for the
most part very minute. To this last, however, E. b"Qccata and
Liclteno1'Q are exceptions. In E. pusillq., microoll-ilos, and others,
four of the pollen.masses are rudimentary and easily overlooked:
~n muscicola ' and microchilos, indeed, I have only succeeded in
finding four j but their form, tapering downwards into a point,
seems to be a safe mark to separate them from the minute Den·
drobia.
257. E. braccnta. (Dendrobium braccatum J L. O. p. 75.-Eria reticosa J
Wight, Ie. 1637.-Eria l1nifloro J Dalzell in Hooker's Journal, iv. 111.)
Ceylon~ Macrae, Gardner (859), Thwaites (2356); Horton plnins,
Champion (Eria velifera, R. W.); Nilgherries, Wight j common on
trees in the Western Ghauts, in tbe rainy season, Stocks (24).
When this was n.r.t published I had been unable to examine
the poUen.masses. It Y8J:ies in the size of the flowers; those
from the 'Vestern Ghauts, preserved among Stocks's l)lants, are
fQur times as large as the Cingalese, with much more acuminate
sepals and petals.
258. E. Lichenora. (Lichenora JerdonianaJ Wigltt, Ie. 1738.)
Malabar mountains, Wight.
This remarkable plant is certaiuly not different from Erin..
259. E. nana, Ach. Rich. in Ann. Se. Nat. scr. ii. xv. 19 .
.I Nilgherries, A. Richard, Wight (l7l. 172).
My authentic specimens from A. Richaxd are identicai with
Wight'. 171. His 172 is somewhat different, with flowers as
laxge as those in Richard's very bad figure of his IJenMom_ mi-
crobolbon, which looks as if it bad been made .uP from the leaves
and flowers of E. nana, while the clissectiolls belonged to another
plant. The thin broad obov.te leaves of this h.ye, however, no
resemblance to Richard's figure .
•
THE OROHIDOLOGY OF INDIA.. 47
260. E. MUSCICOLA; foliis binis Innceolatis basi angustatis scapo apice
bifloro requalibus, bracteis cucullatis membrnnnceis cllspide berbaceo
flore breviore, sepnlis petnlisque lineari-lanccolatis requnlibus ascen-
dcntibus, labeJlo lanceolato cannliculato dorso pubcsccntc.
Dentlrobium muscicolaJ Lindl. Gen. 4' Sp. 75.
Ceylon", Champion, Gardner (853) .
I can only find 4 pyriform pollen-masses in the single flower
at my disposal. The whole plant not more than 2 inches high.
Flowers resemble those of Eria nana on a very smn.ll scale.
Since it has never been found among collections from the N. of
India, it is proba.ble that the old locality" Nepal," was erroneous.
261. E . mierochilos. (Dendrobium microchilos, Dalzell, in H(loker's
Journ. iii. 345.)
On :Mango trees in Western Bengal, Dalzell, Stocks (28).
I bave tbis as D.f""briatum of Dalzell, out of Stocks'. her-
barium; it is certainly distinct from that plant, although very
much like it. The flowers are smaller, more fleshy j and the lip
i. slightly unguicnlate, then irregularly widened and thick-edged,
after which it contracts into a thin-edged acute apex. Only two
pairs of pollen-ma.sses could be found in the flowers I dissected.
The tubercles at tbe base of the lip, spoken of by Mr. Dalzell, I
bave not succeeded in finding.
262. E. Dalzelli.(Dendrobium Dalzelli, Hooker, Journ. Bot. iv. 292.
Dendr. fimbrintum, Dalzell, 1. c.-Dendr. fi liCorme, Wight, Ie. 1642.)
Western Ghl\uts. on trees, Dalzell; hollow trees in the ruins, Stocks
(27); Concan, Law (hb. Hooker . 166, 91); Bombay Presidency.
Dalzell (hb. Ilooker. 167).
I am not surprised at 11&. Dalzell's baving taken this for E.
microchilos, as he tells us was the ca.se; for the two nre exceed-
ingly similar, 8S is indeed shown by so accurate an observer as
Stocks having given the name of microchilo8 to specimens now
before me. The flowers are, however, rather larger and less flesby;
the lip is membranous, ovate-Ia.nceolate, and distinctly sel'l,'ulate to-
wards the point. As to the marginal glands of the sepals, which
gave rise to the namefflYltvriatu')n, they ure very evanescent, and I
suspect sometimes nltogether absent. They are hardly discover-
able in Mr. Law's Concan specimens. Imperfect BIJecimeus from
Oeylon (2353 Rh. Hooker.) probably belong here. Of the eigbt
pollen-masses, four are quite rudimentary.
263. E . ARTICULATA; pseudobulbis oblongis in catenre speciem arti-
culntis, Coliis ... " ' J scapo sctaceo ftexuoso 5-7·floTO, bracteis ovatis
cucuUatis, petalis acutis multo brevioriblls.
Ceylon, IJfrs. General P!'alker (!tb. Hooker.); Gardner.
48 PROFESSOR LIN'DLEY'S CONTRInUTIONS IJ;O
•
THE onCHIDOJ.QGY OF INDIA..
•
50 PRO"FESSOR LINDLEY'S OONTRIBUTIONS TO
§ V. MYOoUtANTHES, Blwne.
The only species figured by Blume, M. laN/alia, is an Eriura.
Wbether his M. oblite.-ata and lobata belong to the same section
is uncertain, nothing being known about them. With me, the
E2
'.
52 :PROFESSOR LINDLEY'S OONTRIBUTIONS TO
species are only the following, easily knO'Vll by their dense spikes
of small woolly flowers, the lateral sepals of which ha.ve scarcely
any obliquity.
279. E. stricta, Lindl. Coli. Bot. t. 41 B. (E. secundiftore, W . Griff.
Not. iii. 302. t. 301.-Mycanmtbes stricta, Lo. 63 j Wight,lc.1733.)
On the N aga bills, on a species of Gordonia at the elevation of 3500
feet, W. Griffith; Darjeeling. Ill; Malacca, ld. fide d. Wight; Sik·
kim, at 3000 feet, and Khnsija, at 4000 feet, J . D. H . (59) .
280. E. retuSB, Rehb. f. in Bonplandia, March I, 1857. (Phreatia
retusa, Lindl. Orch. p. 64.-Dendrolirium retusum, Blume, Bijdr. 351 .
-Bryobium pubescens, Lindl. in Bot. Reg. 1838. misc. no. 14 5.)
Java, Zollinger.
The extrication of this synonymy is due to Prof. llilhb. ill.
281. E . MERGUENSIS; 'caulibus ('tespitosis carnosis elavatis, follis pa·
pyra.ceis oblongis basi angustatis apice obliquis uncinulatisJ spicis
lateralibus elongatis griseo-tomentosis pcdunculo evaginulato. £loribus
(minimis) pilosis, labello trilobo infra istbmum transverse lamellato.
Mergui, Griffith ( 1034); Moulmein, LoM.
Something like a small specimen of E. stricta; but the stems
are fleshy and clavate, the flowers much smaller and not secund,
and the lip quite different.
§ VII. R Y>!ENERlA.
, 283. E. convanarioide., Lindl. Gen. <l" Sp. arch. p. 70; Bot. Reg . 1841.
t. 62, 1847. t . 63.
Khasija, Griffith; at 4000-6000 feet, J . D. H. (60) ; Sikkim, at. 5000
feet, ld., valley. 3000-4000 feet, !d.
Varies in the colour of the Howers, and in their size.
284. E. excavata. Lindl. Gen. ~ Sp. p. 67.
This differs from E. alba chiefly in having the middle lobe of
the lip cordate, acute, ribbed, and much smaller than the middle
lobes which are broad, falcate, and acute.
285. E . alba, Lindl. I. c. p. 67.
a. Lip white.
Sikkim; Darjeeling, in valley. at 3000-4000 feet, J. D. H. (142).
fl. Lip yeUIWJ .
Sikkim, 4000-5000 feet, J . D. H . (68) j MU8S0oree, Edgeworth.
In f3 the lateral lobes of the lip are shorter and blunter than in
a, and the leaves are thinner and more acuminate.
286. E . LINEATA; faliis ohlongis 8ubcoriaceis aeutis, racemis multi-
floris. bracteis ovalibus membranaceis reftexis. ovario tomentoso.
sepalis ovatis subsecundis. labelli lobo media subrotundo retu80 plano
lateralibus obtusis minoribus, axi lineis 3 cran is elevatis ad isthmum
evaneseentibus.
Java, hort. (Ve itch ) ; Continent of India, hort.
This is very like E . alba a, and may be a variety j but the
Howers are dirty yellow with distinct IH1rple stripes, not white,
and are much smaJ.ier, the leaves are twice as broad and more 00-
riMeoua, and the dull purple blunt lateral lobes of the lip are not
wider than the yellow almost 3-toothed middle lobe. It is ' a
garden plant of doubtful origin.
287. E. obean, Lindl. Gen. <l" Sp. p. 68. (Erin Lindleyan., Griff. Not.
iii. 300.)
Moulmein and Mergui, Griffith.
I have no doubt about the correctness of thit:! identification,
notwithstanding that in Griffith's Notul.. it is said to be 554 of
his Mergui herbarium, for I have from himself a drawing, made
in Moulmein in February 1834, and a specimen fi'om Mergui
numbered 374, which agree 'with his description. Neither Wal-
licb's bad old specimens, uor that from Griffith, have any leaves.
He states them to be "lanceolata v. ovato-lanceolata integerrima
glabra venoen. apice recta v. torta." Bya typographical error in
the Botanical Uegister, the stems are said to be 27 instead of 2t
inches long. There is a variety wi.th larger flowers and the lower
half of the lip very gradually passing into the upper, formerly
-~~
1~11 ~~~~~====~1~
~
• t.29 .
S § VIII. Emun....
7
Under this name may be collected the species having small
flowers more or less woolly, very large lateral sepals, and a lip flat
at the base, furfuraceous in the axis, with a woolly tubercle a.t
the apex and base, or at least at the apex. E. javensis, abbretJiata,
and Scnkal'is, lkhb. f., together with the follo,ving, are all at pre-
sent known with certainty.
296. E. paniculata, Litldl. in Wall. Pl. as Rar. i. 32. t. 36.
Sikkim, 10,000 feet, J. D. H. (67); rocks near Sarapanee, Griffith
(1152).
297. E . obliqua. (Mycarallthes obliqua, Lindt. in Bot. Reg . 1840, misc.
184.)
Singapore, Cuming, in. hart.
This differs from E. bifalcis in the form of the lip and in the
presence of a large tumour at the base of the furfuraceous axis.
298. E. MONOSTACHYA j foliis longissimis coriaceis gramilleis cauali.
culatis, racemis lougis eylindraceis tomentosis, labelli quadrilobi
laciniis triaugularibus acutis apicolibus minoribus, lamellis 2 triangu-
laribus aristatis infra istbmum, tuberculis ueos 3 quorum tertium
ultra apicem protrusum.
Mount Gembolo, in the east of Java, Zollinger (53).
I have this from Prof. Rchb. as Eria panicuiata, from which it
differs in its long cylindrical racemes, and the presence of two
sharp-pointed triangular plates below the lateral incisions of the
lip, as well as in the other characters a.bove described.
299. E. REINWARDTJI; foUis disticbis liuearibus rigidis apiee obliquis
ncutis, racemo solitario tenui sessili multifloro, labelli quadrilobi basi
et apice tubereulati laciniis latcralibus obtusis plnnis terminalibus
subcrispis minoribus.
Java, hb. Reinwardt. (Cymbidium parviJloruffI,).
Lea.ves 5 or 6 inches long, sOluewhat clistichous. Spike 4
inches long, terminal, sessile, with tunallrefiexed bracts nearly u.s
long as the ovary.
56 PROFEBSOll LINDLE~'S OONTRIDUTIONS TO
this for it. There are, however, these diflerences : the leaves are
twice as broad and much less acumina.te j the spikes are so dense
as to be almost ova.te j the lateral sepals are not acuminate; the
lip is more rounded at the point and without the raised median
line, instead of which there is only a slight convexity above with
a. corresponding concavity below. The linea verruculosa, ascribed
by Blume to his E. annulata, does not exist in Zollinger's no. 15
of his second collection, which I take for that species; but there
is a distinct elevated even midrib, with a slightly raised line on
either side.
§ XI. UnosTA.cJlYA.
The caulescent species with numerous leaves, and long racemes
or panicles ofilowers, without the woolly lip-appendages of§ERI'
URA, form a natural group which may be collveniently placed apart
from others. The flowers, with the exception of E. barnbusifolia,
are very small and densely arranged.
I' 319. E. floribunda, LAndI. in Bol . Reg. 1844, t. 20.
Java, hb. Junghuhn (307); liergui, Griffith.
I''f ' I
Of this E. leucostacltyn of the Hort. Soc. J ourn. III. xv. and xvi.
is, as was then suggested, a. mere variety:
J
320. E. mierantba, Lindl. Gen. ana Sp. Ore!. p. 68.
Java, Lobb (314).
The Octo'lneria raCetn.o8a of Kuhl and Hnsselt seems, from 8
tracing sent me by Prof. Thlichenbach, to be this plant, which is
very like E.jlori!unda, but with smaller flowers, and with the lip.
auricles perfectly lateral and not intralabe!1aJ,.
321. E. PACHYSTACHYA; foliis oblongo-lanceolatis nervosis. SPICIS
densissimis elongatis glabris, bracteis squamiformibus refiexis, floribus
(minutis) tomentosis mento elongato illcurvo, petalis glabris line-
aribus obtusis falcatis scpalis brevioribus, la\)cllo sessili oblongo
aeuto lrevi.
Ii' Java, Junghuhn (298 ).
I. 322. E. RETROPLEXA; foliis anguste oblongis spieis tenuibus duplo
,
:1
.
THE ORCHIDOLOGY OF INDIA.. 61
longioribus. bracteis oblongis glabris retroflexis, floribus glabris,
sepalis petalis labelloque subrequalibus ontis II.cuti8.
Philippines. Cumi'f/g.
The lateral sep.ls are very little oblique, and the lip is scarcely
distinguishable except iu being more fleshy; it is quite destitute
of all superficial processes.
323. E . BAi\l8USTFOLTA; Coliis oblongis ncuminntis nervosis paniculis
terminalibus laxis tomentosis multifloris subrequalibus, sepalis avatis
obtusi!l tomentosis, petalis obovatis acutis, labella ovato plano glabro
inappendiculato apice dilatato.
Khasija, Griffith; at 2000 feet. 'ftfr. Simons, in hb. Hooker. (64) .
I hR.ve no species very nearly allied to this, whose great leaves
resembling a Bamboo, and loose tomentose terminal panicles as
much as 10 inches long, are very peculiar.
PlillE.l.TIA, Lindl. Gen. fj Sp . p. 68.
Prof. Reichenbach has detected the identity of Plexaure, :EJn.d-
licher, with this well-marked genus. But he bas referred it to
Eria, to which I must withhold assent. The bifid somewhat car-
tilaginous rostellum, which led Endlicher to refer the genus to
N eottiem, u.ppears to afford an absolute mark of distinction, espe-
cially when accompanied, as in this case, by a very peculiar and
scarcely mistakeable habit. Blume refers Pkreati"a elegans to
Thelasis (Mus. Lugd. Bat. ii. p. 187), for reasons which I am
unable to appreciate. No two genera can be more wholly rustinct.
In Hooker and Thomson's herbarium one species ouly occurs;
but a few may be added from other sources, in addition to those
described by Prof. Reichenbach.
324. PhreatiA elegans. Lindl. 1. c. (Thelasis elegans, Blume, MuS.
Lugd. iL 187.)
Kbasija, 4000 feet, J. D. H. 4" T. T. (93).
325. PH. MYOSURUS; follis membranaceis late loratis planis apice
obliquis cuspidatis basi equitantibus, spicis elongatis folio multo 10D-
giOribu8, floribus subverticillatis, bracteis fuscis acuminatis flor~bus
longioribus, labello cuneato juxta. apicem biplicato quasi trilobo. (Eria
. [PhreatiaJ lDyOSUruS, Rchb. f . in Bonplandia, March I, 1857.)
Java, Lobb (166 in hb. Hooker.).
The l.a.rgest of the genus except A. Richard's two d Oberonias,"
glailiata arid micrantlw., which Professor Reichenbach has pointed
out to be Phreatias. O. micrantlta especially seems very near
thi.; but the bracts are represented as being much shorter than
even the pedieels. Flower. very small, hardly longer than the
cinnamon-brown bracts, and arra.nged in a somewhat verticillate
.
.
!
Leaves about 2 inches long. Flowers the smallest in the genus,
1]1 in an erect very slender spike. Bracts brown, setaceous, broad at
the base.
i If'rl
I :,1
327. PH. MICROTlDIS; foEis li.nearibus coriaceis equitantibus apice
acutis recurvis spicis dcnsis angulatis requalibus, bractcis floribus bre-
vioribus, tabello orbiculari concavo basi pandul'uto.
II! I Java, Lobb.
I Much like a pigmy Microtia, the whole plant not exceeding
2 inches in height. Blume's .Denwl'oliriwm p118illum, formerly
referred byrne to Phreati. (Gen. & Sp. p. 64), seems to be rather an
Appendicula, and can have nothing to do with the present species.
328. PH . TAHITENSlS j folio oblongo coriaceo plano oblique bilobo
spicre densre multiflorre requali, scapo trivaginato, mento ohlongo
ohtuso, label1i aeuti rhombei longe unguiclliati angulis lateralibus
runcinatis, bl'acteis oblongis herbaceis acutis canaliculatis florum
longitudine .
. Tahiti, Bidwill.
Plant between 3 and 4 inches high, of which it lllch is occupied
by a dense spike whose flowers are the largest in the genus,
measuring in their dried state nearly -tth of an inch in length.
The lateral sepals are extended into a long blunt chin, which
probably led M. 1l<lichenbach to remark, that "here the genera
Phreatia and Eria run together." But the cartilaginous bifid
rostellum of the former genus is perhaps more strongly marked
in this than in any other species.
THELA.SIS, Blume.
The extremely short characters a.signed by Prof. Blume, both
in his' Bijdragen,' and in his recent' Museum Lugd. Bat.,' to the
species of this curious genus, render aJl attempts at identifying
his plants almost hopeless-e,specin.lly since, in the latter work,
THE OROHIDOLOGY OF INDIA. 63
o he has referred to the genus so wholly different a plant n.s Phreatia
I_ elegans. The only species known at present on the continent of
n India itself, fumishes some addition to the perplexity that sur-
'- rounds the genus.
329. Th. pygmrea. (Euproboscis pygmrea. Griffith. in Cq.lcuttaJournal
of Nat. Hist . v. 372. t. 26; Wight. Ie. t . 1732, not 1733.)
Khasija hills, Griffith, Lobb j at 2000-4000 feet elevation, flowers white,
J. D. H. 4- T. T. (29).
Griffith's figure of his Eup"Ob08ci8 pygmma, in the Calcutta
J aurnal, is sufficient for the identification of this plant, which
seems to be common on the Khnsija. mountains. In that work
the name E. Griffitl.ii, quoted by Prof. Reichenbach (Bonplandia,
Feb. 15, 1857), does not occur. Prof. Blume refers it to his
Th. capitata which differs in having a U spica denas. ovoidea deinde
cylindrica," and an ovate obtuse lip, no description that in no way
applies to this. Dr. Wight's figure is a good one, but from a
small specimen whose flowers are in a. state of Peloria. The name
P!lgmma is objectionable, for there are specimens before me as
much as 8 inches high j it must however stand. A Thelasis from
Rong Kong, sent by Dr. Hance (287), appears to be either this
or Th. tJripte1'a j but my specimens are not good enough for
positive determination .
330. TH . OCHREATA; folio coriaceo lorato obtuso <,analiculato basi
squama maxima laxa truncata stipato. scapo foliis duplo breviore
vaginis maximis laxis truncatis baseos binis medii 8olitaria. spica den~
sissimn bracteis reflexis acutis amplexicaulibus duris concavis, ovario
obovnto. sepalis aite carinatis supremo gnleato. labello ovato obtuso.
Borneo j low forests of Sarawak. T. Lobb.
I should have thought that this might have been Blume's Ph.
capitata, judgiug from his latest definition; but Prof. Reichenbach,
who has carefully examined that plant, describes the leaves as
cuneate and equally 2-lobed, and the sepals entirely without
carinre. The leaves are a foot long when full.grown.
I have two or three more species of the genus, but until some
autbentic evi dence concerning Blume's plants renches me, I can~
not ventul'e to Dame them.
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