| + | Many garden names occur in Cotyledon, some of which are unidentifiable and some of which probably represent hybrids. C. devensis, Hort. Hybrid between probably C. glauca and C. gibbiflora: fl.-sts. 5-7 ft. long. B.M. 8104.—C. elegans, N. E. Br.= Oliveranthus.— C. eximia, Hort.=(7). — C. globosa, Hort., see page 1087.—C. globulariaefolia. Baker. Rosulate, 8 in.: lvs. 30-40, obovate-spatulate, 2½ in. or less long: fls. white tinged red, 20-40 in a dense thyrse-like cluster. Syria.—C. imbricata, Hort.. described on p. 1087.—C. insignis, N. E. Br. About 2 ft., wholly glabrous, erect, light green: lvs. opposite, broad, to 5 in. long: fls. light red with lobes greenish yellow inside, 1½ in. long, in terminal and axillary cymea. Cent. Afr. B.M. 8036.—C. mirabilis, Hort..hybrid. —C. mucronata, Baker.=Echeveria, p. 1086.—C. nano, Marl. Very dwarf, 1½ in. or less high, densely branched and forming a tuft: lvs. yellowish green, not apiculate. S. Afr.—C. Peatalozzae, Mast. Lvs. distributed, the radical ones spatulate-obtuse and margins slightly denticulate, the cauline obovate-oblong: fls. pale rose, somewhat secund in a glandular-hairy panicle. Cilicia.—C. pulvinata, Hook. f. =Echeveria, p. 1086.—C. sedoides, DC. Annual, creeping, smooth: lvs. sedum-like, oblong and obtuse, convex: fls. few, pink, in summer. Pyrenees. Distinguished from Sedum by the gamopetalous corolla. — C. spinosus. Linn. Small and quaint, Apicra-like, with a rosette of flat spoon-shaped spine-tipped lvs., 12 in. or more tall: fls. yellow, in early summer. Siberia to China and Japan, but not hardy.— C. superba, Hort., is an annual with yellow fls.—C. teretifolia, Thunb. St. somewhat woody, 6-8 in. high, simple or branched: lvs. 4—5 in. long, opposite, nearly terete, acute or cuspidate, hirsute or subglabrous: fls. many, corymbed, the peduncle to 18 in., yellow; corolla-tube a little shorter then calyx. S. Afr. L. H. B. |