[1172] See B. xxv. c. 38.
[1173] See B. xxv. c. 67.
[1174] See B. xxiv. cc. 49, 84, and B. xxv. c. 69.
[1175] See B. xxv. c. 70.
[1176] Identical with the Orobanche of B. xviii. c. 44, the Cuscuta Europæa of Linnæus, Dodder, Hell-weed, or Devil’s guts; or else the Cuscuta minor, or epithymum of Linnæus. See also B. xxii. cc. 78, 80.
[1177] He is in error here.
[1178] Hardouin suggests “hypopheos,” as “springing up under the Pheos” or Stœbe, mentioned in B. xxii. c. 13.
[1179] See B. xxi. c. 19.
[1180] It has a root originally, but the root withers as soon as it has attached itself to the stem of the plant to which it clings.
[1181] See B. xxv. c. 37. Holland says, on the contrary, that it is a binding plant.