. Carnegie Institution of Washington publication. PERESKIA. II densely branched bush, but is sometimes grown as a climber, as a basket plant, or in the form of a pyramid. It is especially distinguished by the rich coloration of the leaves, which are variously mottled or blotched above with crimson, apricot-yellow, and green, but of a uniform purplish crimson beneath. We have seen this form in the New York Botanical Garden, where it is grown only as a bush. It was exhibited first at Ghent, Belgium, in 1908, and is supposed to have originated in Queensland, Australia. Illustrations: Stand. Cycl.


. Carnegie Institution of Washington publication. PERESKIA. II densely branched bush, but is sometimes grown as a climber, as a basket plant, or in the form of a pyramid. It is especially distinguished by the rich coloration of the leaves, which are variously mottled or blotched above with crimson, apricot-yellow, and green, but of a uniform purplish crimson beneath. We have seen this form in the New York Botanical Garden, where it is grown only as a bush. It was exhibited first at Ghent, Belgium, in 1908, and is supposed to have originated in Queensland, Australia. Illustrations: Stand. Cycl. Hort. Bailey 5: pi. 87; Bliihende Kakteen 2: pi. 86; Bot. Reg. 23: pi. 1928; Curtis's Bot. Mag. 116: pi. 7147; Gard. Chron. III. 29: f. 61; Plunder, Nov. PI. Amer. pi. 26, in part; Safford, Ann. Rep. Smiths. Inst. 1908: f. 10; Schumann, FIG. 2.—Pereskia autumnalis. Kakteen f. 109, all as P. aculeata. Descourtilz, Fl. Med. Antill. ed. 2. 4: pi. 294, as Cactier a Fruits Feuilles; Vellozo,Fl. Flum. 5: pi. 26, as Cactus pcrcskia; Gard. Chron. : f. 114, as P. godscffiana. Plate ii, figure i, of this volume is a flowering branch of a plant at the New York Bo- tanical Garden obtained from M. Simon, of St. Ouen, Paris, France, in 1901; figure 2, fruit of same plant; figure 3, fruit of another plant. Text-figure i, from a photograph taken by Paul G. Russell at La Plata, Argentina, in September 1915, shows the plant used as a hedge. Series 2. GRANDIFOLIAE. In this series we include 18 species, all tropical American, both continental and insular. Schumann, regarding the series as a subgenus, applied to it the name Ahoflocarpus. 1. Pereskia autumnalis (Eichlam) Rose, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 12:399. 1909. Pereskiopsis autumnalis Eichlam, Monatsschr. Kakteenk. 19: 22. 1909. Tree, 6 to 9 meters high, with a large, round, much branched top, the trunk usually very definite and 40 cm. or more in diameter, often covered with a formidable array of spines; young branches. Please


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