CONVOLVULUS DUARTINUS. (NOBIS) CGNVUL. BLURT. CALONYCTION sPECIOSUM. (D. C.) IPOMEA BONA NOR. (LINN.) CONVOLVULUS PULCHERRIMUS. (WELL.) MORNING-GLORY THIS is a climbing plant, cultivated in America and Europe. Leaves large, entire,

CERVUS BRAZILICUS (NOBIS) CERV. BRAZILIAN STAG; GUAZOUTI. PORTUG: GOUAZOUPITA. This stag whose forms are extremely fine and graceful, inhabits the forests of Brazil. Its size is about the same as

CANNA ANGUSTIFOLIA C. ANG. CANNA GLAUCA. PORTUG.: IMBIRI This plant inhabits damp regions, or the borders of brooks. Its stem is erect, cylindrical, growing to a height of about six

BUFO SAHYTIENSIS. (NOBIS.) BUFO. BUFO AGUA (LAT.) TOAD THIs toad is found all over America; it inhabits swamps and marshy regions. It is as big as two fists, though its

ARISTOLOCHIA MILHOMENS (NOBIS.) ARIST. ARISTOLOCHIA GLANDIFLORA (GOM.) -ARISTOLOCHIA CYMBIFERA (MART.) SNAKE-ROOT A climbing plant with a glabrous stem; leaves alternate. Uniformly cordate, pedati-nerved, with reticulate little veins between the nerves;

AMPHISBOENA VERMICULARIS AMPH. Tate species moves either backwards or forwards, as occasion may require, and is quite frequent in the woods of Brazil. Its body is cylindrical, from two feet