NP = Ui f Mayly Si (Ip / Es ae y STOO aD 5 Aigner As) mee yA) iG MASTIXIA ARBOREA. (Nat. order Cornacez.) MASTIXIA. Bi —Flowers hermathrodite. Calyx-tube campauulate, limb dilated 4-5 toothed, petals 4-5 ovate coriaceous yvalvate, apex inflexed fimbriate or toothed, stamens 4-5 alternate with the petals and inserted under the margin of the disk, filaments short compressed, anthers cordate, disk large fleshy, ovary inferior 1 celled. Style short thick, stigma punctiform, ovule 1 pendulous from the apex or near the apex of the cell. Drups ovoid subglobose or oblong, umbilicate at the apex, sarcocarp fleshy green, putamen woody very hard deeply channelled on one side and there furnished with a hard woody process which intrudes into the albumen aud nearly divides the cell into 2 compartments, seed conforming to the cell, testa membran- aceous, albumen copious fleshy, embryo with thin msmbranaceous ovate foliaceous cotyledons and a very long superior cylindrical radicle. Trees, gla- brous, branches terete, leaves simple entire oblong (turning black iu drying, at least ou the upper side) alternate in the Indian spezies, opposite in some Java ones; flowers inconspicuous in terminal many flowered panicles. B/. Bijd. 654;—Mus. Bot, Lugd, But. i, 256. ¢. 58. Bursinopetalum, Wight Icones tab. 956. MAstTIxtA ARBOREA. (Wight.) A very large tree, leaves very dark green glabrous coriaceous oblong obtuse or acute or with a sudden rather long acumination, 2-9 inches long by 14-4 inches broad, petiole 4-2 inches long, flowers tetramerous or pen- tamerous, calyx and corol slightly pubescent, fruit oblong size of a large olive the apex marked with a large scar where the flower has separated.—Bursinopetalum arboreum, Wight Icones tab. 956. B. tetrandrum, Wight MSS. ;—Thw. En. Pl. Zey. p. 42. This tree is very abundant in our dense Western ghat moist forests from Canara downwards to Cape Comorin, at elevations from 2000 to 7000 feet, and itis also found in Ceylon; it is most abundant iv the Bolamputty forests af 2500 feet elevation, and is common on the Nilgiris at 6000-7000 feet, at the higher elevation it ts not nearly suck a large tree but tts leaves are much larger and more coriaceous and its flowers are larger, Phe tetramerous formis certainly not a distinct species, as both forms occur on one and the sume tree. Nothing is known of its timber oi uses, but the former ts probably good. = Analysis. i. Yi/ 77 f b, los s\ a(t Ne Vs 5: \ Va / 77 ae zh ree wleweugs 3 Lypleyjicea epcocespoar, Dh, vy, r Bik Te ie fh SV Lie ae is a estes 4 ul WENDLANDIA NOTONIANA. (Nat. order Rubiacez) WENDLANDIA. Baril,—GEN. CHAR. Calyx tube short rather globose, limb of 5 small persistent teeth, corol funnel-shaped the tube long and slightly wider towards the top, the limb spreading 5 lobed the lobes imbricate in estivation, stamens 5, the filaments short arising from the apex of the tube between the lobes and attached to the centre of the anther, anthers oblong exserted, dish fleshy crowning the apex of the ovary, style filiform exserted, stigma 2-cleft divisions oval large. Ovary 2-celled, ovules numerous in each cell attached to a large placenta which rises from the centre of the axis. Capsule globose crowned with the limb of the calyx 2-celled splitting at the apex loculicidally. Seeds minute numerous. Trees or large shrubs, leaves in verticels of threes, or opposite, stipules large prominent, panicles terminal thyrsoid many flowered, flowers white small. Wenptanpia Nortoniana. (Wall.) A small or rarely a middling sized tree, young shoots kirsute, leaves generally verticelled in threes sometimes simply opposite lanceolate, or rarely obovate lanceolate acute at the apex, upper side glabrous or sub-glabrous except the costa, underside minutely pubescent, 3-5 inches long by about 14-14 broad, petioles 2-3 lines long, stipules large more or less hirsute ovate from a broad base sometimes bifid at the apex, branches of the panicle hirsute somewhat erect, flowers small white more or less crowded and forming interrupted spikes, calyx and bracts hirsute. Calycine teeth triangular acute ciliate, corol glabrous 6-8 times longer than the calyx, the tube widened at the mouth, lobes oval obtuse recurved, anthers with very short filaments. Wall. ;—W4A. Prod. p. 403. W. bicuspidata, WA. 1. ¢. This small tree is common in most of our alpine and subalpine jungles from 2000 to 7000 feet elevation, The timber is strong and used for various purposes by the natives. Analysis. A magnified portion of a branch showing the verticel of 3 leaves and the 3 stipules. Under surface of a leaf showing pubescence. Magnified portion of a panicle. A flower bud showing the lobes imbricate. A full flower. Corol removed and opened out, showing the insertion of the stamens between its lobes. Anthers front and back view, showing the short filament. A flower with the corol removed, showing the style and stigma. Ovary cut vertically, showing the numerous ovules. The same cut transversely. OO OIA Te wp od 2 ) ee eee RE RS OT TINE Oe AL I VERNONIA VOLKAMERIZFOLIA. (Nat. order Composite.) VERNONIA. Schreb—GEN. CHAR. Capituli many-flowered. Florets all tubular and equal regular with 5 narrow lobes, inyolucre ovoid-glubular or hemispherical, the bracts imbricate not longer than the florets, the inner bracts the longest, receptacle naked. Anthers obtuse at the base, style, lobes subulate achenes mostly striate or angular rarely cylindrical. Pappus of numerous capillary bristles usually surrounded by an outer row or very short often scaly bristles which are rarely entirely wanting. Rarely trees, generally herbs, shrubs or climbers, leaves alternate. Flower-heads terminal or in the upper axils in cymes or panicles or sometimes solitary. VERNONIA VOLKAMERIZFOLIA. (DC.) A good sized tree, young branches more or less pubescent, leaves sub- membranaceous elliptic to elliptico-obovate, acute at the base, irregularly crenate or crenately-lobed towards the apex 4-6 inches long by 14 to 23 broad, minutely glandular on both sides, in age glabrous above except the costa, beneath slightly puberulous, primary veins and transverse veinlets very prominent, petioles about 6 lines long, panicle terminal leafless cymose, rachis angled hoary or tomentose, bracts at the ramifications linear-oblong, flower-heads on rather slender pedicels laxly arranged at the ends of the branchlets, involucral bracts sericeous the outer ones short ovate, the inner narrow oblong, achenes glandulose, pappus very white, the outer bristles short. DC. Prod. v. 32. : T have only met with this tree on the South Travancore ghats at about 3000-4000 feet elevation (Attraymallay ghat), and I do not think it occurs on the Nilgiris or any where north of the Palghat gap, but if it is the volkamericefolia of DC. (and my specimens were named at Kew), it also occurs in Nevat. Its timber is soft and worthless ; it is the only Composite known to me in this Presidency which grows toa tree except Mo- nosis, but Vernonia Javanica, a considerable tree, occurs in Ceylon, and is probably also found in S. Tinnevel’y or Travancore. 225 PL: CCXAV SL il \\\ \\) \\ \ \\\ \\ \ \ \ Way \ \ \ i ee. y NW K (¢ \ | 7 NU : SE Gouda. del: pe Janene wlhemeasyiin 24, ther , ; 7 Va O rn fe od VA goa al feo MONOSIS WIGHTIANA. (Nat. order Composite.) MonosIS. DC.—GEN. CHAR. Capituli 1-flowered, the floret tubular and equal regular with 5 narrow lobes, involucre oblong the scales imbricate obtuse much shorter than the floret, anthers obtuse at the base without tails, style-lobes subulate, achenes glabrous terete, pappus 2-3 series bristles rigid scabrous equal, Trees or shrubs, leaves alternate, panicles naked the apices of the branchlets bearing numerous subumbellate sessile capituli, flowers rose-colored. Mon OSIS WIGHTIANA. (DC.) A good sized tree, branches terete velutino-tomentose, leaves from elliptic or oblongo elliptic to obovate, acute or rounded at the apex, cuneate, acute or obtuse or even subcordate at the hase, quite entire or with irregular distant serratures, subglabrous except the veins above, velutino-hirsute beneath, 6-8 inches or more long by 23-34 broad, primary pin- nate veins very prominent, petioles 6-12 lines long, panicles terminal yery large much branched bracts of the lower ramifications large spathulate, flower-heads pedicelled or sessile at the apices of the sub-corymbose ramuli, involucral-bracts obtuse pubescent outside. Wight. Icones tab. 1085. s A very showy tree when in full flower in February and March ;it is abundant on the eastern slopes of the Nilgiris 4t 4000-5000 feet elevation, and is also to be met with elsewhere on our western mountains (Anamallays, Pulneys, &c.) ; its wood is soft and worthless, bo to D L:CCYXVI. p 1 VACCINIUM LESCHENAULTII. (Nat. order Ericacez.) V ACCINIUM. Lindley GEN. CHAR. Calyx tube adnate, the limb of 4-5 teeth, corol superior, the tube ovate campanulate or shortly cylindrical, the limb of 4-5 short lobes or teeth. Stamens double as many as the calyx teeth and corol lobes. Anther-cells elongated into long tubular points and opening at the apex of these in oblique pores, ovary inferior 4-5 celled with several ovules in each cell attached to the centre of the axis, fruit a berry. Trees or shrubs, leaves alternate, flowers showy. V ACCINIUM LLESCHENAULTII. (Wight.) A smallor middling sized tree, young shoots puberulous at length glabrous, leaves from oval to ovate, from pointed and mucronate to quite retuse at the apex, serrated, paler beneath, slightly puberulous on the costa and veins when young at length quite glabrous, 14-2} inches long by 1-1} broad, venation penniveined aud looped within the margin, petals about 3 lines long puberulous, racemes axillary or terminal or on leafless shouts, flowers pink very showy, pentamerous; calyx-lobes ciliate and minutely green-gland tipped at the apex, filaments hairy dilated at the base narrowed upwards attached to near the apex of the lower portion of the anther-cells just between the 2 prominent bristles, stigma with a few black erect hairs. Wight Icones tab. 1188. V. arboreum, Lesh. not Michz, Agapetes? arborea, Dun. in DC. Prod. vii. Andromeda symplocifolia, Wall. l. n. 1522, A very pretty tree abundant on the Nilgiris at the higher elevations, and on the Anamallays, Pulneys, and Ceylon mountains ; the fruit, which is about as large as currants, is eaten, it is an ugreeable acid and makes good tarts ; the tree is called andoovan on the Nilgiris. The wood is rose colored, with a red heart, wavy grained and pleasant to work, and would be excellent for cabinet work, Analysts. 1. A flower bud. . A full flower. The same, corol removed, The tubular corol removed and opened out. A flower, corol and all the stamens except one removed, to show the disk, style, and insertion of the stamens. 6A. Authers, front view, showing the hairy filament dilated at its base and the cells elongating into terminal tubular points with a pore at the apex, 6B. Anther back view, showing the filament adnate to the cells just between the 2 bristles. 6C. Anther, side view. 7. Ovary cut vertically. 8. Ovary cut transversely. (Drawn from fresh specimens.) Fal CORY! ae Diraypiey L Vie Like fh RHODODENDRON ARBOREUM. (Nat. order Ericaceze.) RHODODENDRON. Linn.— GEN. CHAR, Calyx free 5 lobed or toothed; corol obliquely campanulate rarely contracted into a narrow tube, or rotate with scarcely any tube, 5 lobed or very rarely 10 lobed; stamens 10 or rarely more declinate, anthers without awns, the cells opening in terminal pores; ovary 5-10 celled; capsule opening septicidally in 5-10 valves. Trees or shrubs, leaves ever green entire often with a mealy or scaly pubescence ; flowers in dense terminal corymbs or heads or rarely solitary issuing with the young leaves fvom scaly buds. RHODODENDRON ARBOREUM. (Smith.) A small or middling sized tree sometimes of considerable girth, leaves crowded at the ends of the branches very coriaceous lanceolate entire or slightly waved at the margin, glabrous above except the costa, densely rusty beneath with copious close set brown scales, 3-44 inches long by 14-14 broad, pinnate veins very prominent thick and much raised on the under surface of the leaf, reticulated veinlets and venules very numerous and forming a very beautiful minute net work (as seen under the lens when the dense mass of rusty scales is removed), petioles 4-7 lines long furnished with blackish pubes- cence, flowers 14 to nearly 2 inches long bright crimson or rarely white or pale rose arranged in dense terminal compact heads or corymbs, pedicels 4-5 lines long, densely covered as is the calyx with stellate pubescence which is snow-white when in flower and reddish when in young fruit, a large very membranaceous silky obovato-spathulate pointed concave bract (about 1 inch long and 3 inch broad) at the base of each pedicel and 2 small subulate bracteoles on the pedicel either both near the base or one of them, sometimes at the centre, all soon becoming scariose and early deciduous, calyx small rather irregularly 5-lobed, corol broadly tubular, the limb shortly 5-lobed, the lobes emarginate, stamens 10 very unequal in length, anther-cells broader upwards, filaments attached to near the apex at the back, ovary densely sericeous with silky white hair, stigma large capitate depressed and hollow in the centre, young fruit dotted with reddish-brown stellate pubescence, capsule narrow oblong slightly recurved quite glabrous in age about 1 inch long: Smith in DC. Prod. vii. 720. This very gorgeous tree is most abundant on the Nilgiris, Pulneys, Anamallays and Ceylon mountains, from an elevation of 4800 up- wards, and if itis the true R. arboreum, it ts also found in the Himalayas; but itis said to differ somewhat from the Himalayan tree, particularly in the pubescence on the under surface of the leaves, and was long ago distinguished as R. nobile, though since joined with arboreum. Ihave however no specimens of the Himalayan tree for comparison, but I have given a most detailed description and careful analysis from fresh specimens. The wood is occasionally used for gun stocks, posts and other purposes ; it is close in the grain, but wanting in fibre and shrinks and twists in seasoning. The twee is called Billee and Poomaram on the Nilgiris, and Ma-ratmal in Ceylon ; it is to be found in flower all the year round, but most profusely so in February. Analysis. 1, Under surface of a leaf showing the dense matted pubescence and the prominently raised veins. 2, A flower bud with the large bract and 2 bracteoles. 3. A full flower. 4, The large concave bract. 5, Front and back view of the bracteoles. 6. A flower, corol removed tv show the 10 declinate unequal stamens, the vract and bracteoles attached to the base of the pedicel. 7. Corol opened, 8. Ovary and style. 9, Pedicel and calyx, showing the two bracteoles attached to the base of the flower. 10. ‘I'he same only with one of the bracteoles attached half way up the pedicel. 11, The stellate tuft of hairs which forms the pubescence on the calyx and pedicels. 12. Auther front view, showing the 2 pores at the apex of the cells. 13. Anther back view, showing the attachment of the filament, 14, The same, side view. 15. Ovary cut vertically. 16. Very young fruit cut transversely. 17. Young fruit. 18. The ripe capsule burst septicidally (the seed removed), showing the valves separated from the plancentiferous asis which bears the seed, 19. Inside view of one of the valves, 20. Side view of a portion of the same. (Drawn from fresh specimens, ) 228 PL: CCXYIML ORDER VII-A.—VIOLARIEA#. Gen. Char. Flowers hermathrodite or rarely polygamous, irregular, orregular, sepals 5 equal or unequal imbricate in zstivation, petals 5 nearly equal or the lower larger unguiculate or sessile, stamens 5 free or monadelphous, anthers erect 2 celled with the connective generally produced beyond the cells, ovary sessile 1-celled, placentas usually 3, each with 1-many anatropous ovules, style usually simple sometimes clavate, stigma terminal or lateral, fruit a capsule dehiscing loculicidally or septicidally 1-many seeded, seeds with a fleshy albumen and axile embryo. Herbs, shrubs or small trees, leaves usually alternate entire serrate or crenate stipulate, flowers azil- lary or terminal solitary fascicled racemose or panicled, small in the woody species. A small order only represented in Southern India by one small tree Alsodeia Zeylanica first discovered in Ceylon, and now detected in South Travancore and in the Wynad. Of herbaceous plants this order gives us 2 indigenous species of Viola and 2 of Ionidium and 1 species of Scyphellandra, a small undershrub found in Ceylon. ALSODEIA. Tuovars. Gen, Char. Sepals not produced atthe base, petals equal or nearly equal exunguiculate or nearly so, filaments connate the anthers inserted upon or within the margin of the tube or free usually with a conspicuous dorsal or terminal connective produced beyond the cell, placentas 1 many ovulate, style straight with a terminal stigma. Capsule 3 valved opening loculicidally few seeded, seeds round or angulate glabrous or cottony. Shrubs or trees, leaves usually alternate serrate or crenate or entire, flowers small axillary or terminal fasciculate racemose or paniculate, rarely solitary.— Vareca, Roxb. Pentaloba, Zour. Prosthesia, Blume. Medusa, Low. ALSODEIA AEYLANICA. (Arot.) A small tree or large shrub, branchlets terete, the young parts very minutely puberulous. Leaves lanceolate to ovato-lanceolate acuminate 2-6 inches long by 1-3 broad, shining beautifully reticulated, minutely dentate furnished with hairy glands in the axils of the veins beneath, petioles 24-5 lines long deeply channelled above. Stipules linear lanceolate acute minutely hairy at the centre of the back and ciliate, 3-44 lines long, deciduous. Flowers polygamous in small many bracteoled fascicles in the axils or at the axils of the fallen leaves, bracteoles acute minutely ciliate, pedicels 1-2 lines long, flowers very small white, calycine-segments ovate lanceolate acute slightly hairy, petals recurved at the apex more than twice as long as the sepals, stamen-tube 5 lobed the lobes crenated, the stamens inserted on the inside of the tube about its centre and opposite the lobeg small and sterile in the female, the connective large particularly in the male, petaloid and much produced at the side and terminating at the apex in a large rounded lobe, anther-cells introrse, ovary 3 ovuled (small and sterile in the male) stigma small entire or suben- tire.—Pentaloba Zeylanica, Arnt. Mag. of Zool. and Bot. ii. 548. Alsodeia, Thw. Hn. Pl. Zey, p- 21, I have found this small tree in the Travancore forests near Colatoorpalay and also in the Wynad. I have no specimens of the Ceylon plant for comparison, and Dr. Thwaites informs me that that is devoid of the harry glands in the axils of the veins on the underside of the leaves, Specimens I forwarded to Kew were huwever named as above. No mention hus been before made of any species of this genus being polygamous which this certainly is, The Travancore plant was in flower and ripe fruit in August. Analysis. 2. Bud and full flower (male.) 3. The same, open. 4, Stamens removed, showing the stamen-tube and small sterile ovary. 4, The same calyx-tube opened out to show the attachment of stamens, 5. Anther, front view. 6. Anther, back view. 7,8, 9. Fertile flowers showing the large ovary, style and stigma, and the attachment of the sterile stamens. 10. Sterile stamens, front and back view. 11. Ovary cut trausversely, showing that it is 1-celled with 3 parietal placentas, 12. The same more advanced cut vertically. 13, Young fruit. 14, Nearly ripe fruit cut vertically. PL: CCXXIX. Luray, Ltlfe: Tea een 7) flO TALEE A ae tLe 2) te A an STERCULIA HAYNII. (Nat. order Sterculiacez.) For Gen, Char. see letter press to Plate cy. Stercunia Haynu. (Bedd.) A large tree young parts covered with dense golden stellate pubescence, leaves about the extremities of the branches submembranaceous cordate acute entire or slightly undulate 7 nerved, 4-6 inches long by 3-5 inches broad, when young covered with stellate pubescence in age quite glabrous, petioles 1-2 inches long stellately pubescent, racemes from the old axils below the leaves much shorter than the leaves few flowered, flowers 9-10 lines long on very short pedicels, calyx of 5 lanceolate segments densely covered with stellate pubescence, petals none. Jfale, staminal column slender $ the length of the calyx bearing 5-6 very small sterile ovaries at its apex round which are arranged regularly 4-5 phalanges of stamens each bearing on the outside 4 anthers, 2 on each side, anther cells linear oblong flexuose. Wemale or hermathrodite, ovaries 5 sessile, pubescent, styles re- curved 2 lobed, ovules very numerous in 3 rows on the ventral suture, phalanges of stamens 4-5, sessile round the base of the ovaries very similar to those in the male, follicles depresso-globose about 5 inches in diameter on stalks 14 inches long, hard and woody out- side and furnished with stellate pubescence, soft and corky on the inside, dehiscing along the ventral suture where the seeds lie in 2 rows, their short hard grey woody funicle fitting into little deep pits, seeds about 40, furnished with a soft corky oblong wing which with the seed is 3 inches long and nearly 14 inches broad, cotyledons not separable from the mealy albumen, radicle small.close to the hilum. This interesting tree has just been discovered on the Tinnevelly ghats by Mr. Hayne of the Forest Department, it belongs to the Section Pterygota and tt differs from the Ceylon Sterculia (Pterygota) alata in many respects, particularly in the shape and texture of its leaves and tn its flowers and seed being 3 times as large. J have not seen the fruit of the Ceylon tree, this tree however answers so wellto Roxburgh’s descrip- tion of Sterculia alata, Fl. Ind. iii, p. 152, that Ihave a suspicion that tt may be his tree, in which case the Ceylon tree will be a new species, The tree is called by the natives Kodathanee. Analysis. 1, A young fiower nearly globose showing the valvyate sepals. 2. Magnified hairs which form the stellate pubescence on the inflorescence and young leaves. 8, A female flower 6 sepals, no petals. 4, The same, the calyx removed showing the 6 sessile ovaries closely adnate and the sessile phalanges of stamens. 5. Side view of a phalanx of stamens. 6. A single ovary. 7. The same cut vertically showing the 3 rows of ovules on the ventral suture. 8. The same cut transversely. 9. A follicle (life size) after dehiscence, the seeds removed. 10. Portion of the same showing the insertion of the seeds. 11. A seed (life size.) 12, The same cut vertically showing the radicle close to the hilum. € 13. aaa gen EN ay SCHREBERA SWIETENIOIDES. (Nat. order Bignoniacez ?) SCHREBERA. Roxb.—GEN. CHAR. Calyx tubular 5-cleft at length somewhat bilabiate, corol hypogynous infundibuliform, tube eylindri- cal, limb 5-7 parted, lobes patent cuneate obtuse, stamens 2 inserted on to the middle of the tube of the corol included, filaments very short, anthers oblong 2-celled, cells parallel dehiscing longitudinally, ovary free 2-celled, ovules 4 in each cell pendulous from near the apex, style simple exserted, stigma bifid, eapsule pyriform woody hard scabrous 2-celled dehiscing loculicidally, valves septiferous, seeds 4 in each cell pendulous irregularly oval compressed produced into a long membranaceous wing, testa smooth, endopleura somewhat thick spongy, embryo exalbuminous, radicle short next the hilum, cotyledons oblong longitudinally plaited. A tree, leaves opposite unequally pinnate, leaflets subopposite cordate entire, panicles terminal, flowers small white. Roxb. Fl, Ind. i. p. 109. : SCHREBERA SWIETENIOIDES. (Roxb.) A large timber tree, trunk erect, bark scabrous, branches numerous spreading in every direction, leaves nearly opposite pinnate with an odd one about a foot long, leaflets 3-4 pair opposite or subopposite short petiolaled, the lowermost largest and obliquely ovate or cordate while those towards the apex become narrower, all quite entire acute, smooth on both sides, 3-4 inches long, stipules none, panicles terminal thin trichotomous, bracts small caducous, flowers rather small white variegated with brown very fragrant at night, calyx at length 2-lipped with sometimes 2 lateral toothlets one on each side of the fissures which separate the lips, corol-tube 3-4 times longer than the calyx, capsule size of a pullet’s egg. Roxb. Fl. Ind.i. p. 108 ;—Wight, Ill. p. 185 tab. 162, This tree is not common, though to be met with in the forests oi both sides af the Presidency, it is not rare in the Godavery forests on the east side, and pretty abuadant in the Mudumullay forests on the west side; it is called Makkam in Teligu and Mogalinga in Tamil, and Moka on the Bombay side; the wood is grey or whitish, very close grained, heavy and durable, does not warp, used for making looms and many purposes with the natives, and well adapted for the purposes of the lathe, The drawing is copied from Wight’s Illustrations, as I have no specimens at hand, 248 — SE Bes », ae y ae MILLINGTONIA HORTENSIS. (Nat. order Bignoniacez.) MILLINGTONIA. Linn. fil.—GEN. CHAR. alyx short campanulate equally 5-toothed, teeth revolute, corol hypogynous, tube infundibu- liform long slender, limb bilabiate, the upper lip erect semi-bifid, the lower spreading 3 parted, divisions equal all imbricate, stamens didynamous inserted into the jaws of the corol exserted, anthers calcarate 2-celled, cells parallel equal, ovary 2-celled, ovules numerous, style simple, stigma bilabiate, capsule siliqueeform long slender 2-celled 2-valved, partition parallel, seeds numerous round very thin surrounded with a fine transparent wing, embryo exalbumin - ous with 2 reniform emarginate cotyledons, and the radicle pointing to the hilum. A tree, leaves opposite supra-decompound very similar to those of 2 Melia, flowers white showy fragrant in terminal panicles. MILLINGTONIA HORTENSIS. (Linn.) A large tree, trunk straight, bark deeply cracked in various directions and of a soft spongy nature, young parts and young leaves slightly pubescent, leaves opposite supra-decompound about 2 feet long, leafiets sub- Cordate entire with long tapering obtuse points, glabrous on both sides, deep green, 1-3 inches long, petiolules 2-3 lines long, panicles terminal solitary much branched, bracts minute, flowers numerous 3-34 inches long pure white very fragrant, style as long as the corol, stigma of 2 broad lobes, fruit linear thin pointed pretty smooth 12 inches long by # inch broad.—Bignonia suberosa, Roxb. Fl, Ind. iii. p, 111. This is the so-called cork tree, abundant in a planted state in avenues, topes and gardens in the Presidency; it is wild, I believe, in Bir- mah, but I have never seen it in the jungles of this Presidency, though it is said to occur in some of oun Southern Provinces ; tt is highly ornamen- tal and a very rapid grower. The woodis hard, close-grained and of a pale yellow colour, not easily worked, flexible but not fibrous. MIP ae ps Analysis. A flower. Calyx opened and corol removed to show ovary and style, calycine segments hairy inside on the upper half, Corol opened, 12 stamens alternately shorter. Anthers, front and back view. Ovary and style. Ovary cut vertically, ovules attached to centre of axis. Ovary cut transversely, 6 cells, (Drawn from dried specimens.) Analysis. BAssiA PETIOLARIS. (Vide Manual, page cxl.) Full flowers, The calyx 6-lobed in 2 series, the inner lobes the longer. Calyx opened, lobes hairy on the upper half inside. Corol opened, 12 stamens in a single row slightly imbricate or sub 2 rowed, alternately shorter. The longer stamens, front and back view, anthers bluntly 2-lobed at the apex. The shorter stamen front view, anthers sharply 2-lobed, one of the lobes long and recurved. Apex of style and the hollow stigma. Ovary cut vertically, ovules erect from near the base of the axis. Ovary cut transversely, 6 cells. Fruit. (Drawn from dried specimens.) BaAsstA NERIIFoLIA, (Vide Manual, page cxl.) Calyx and style. Corol open showing the 12 stamens in 1 row, or sub 2-rowed. Anuthers, front and back view. Transverse section of ovary, 6 cells. Fruit. Seed. (Drawn from dried specimens.) 254 HARDWICKIA PINNATA. (Nat. order Leguminosz.) For Gen. Char. see letter-press to Pl, xxvi. HARDWICKIA PINNATA. (Roxb.) A very large tree, leaves pinnate 4-8 inches long, leaflets coriaceous 5-6 alternate glabrous and shining, ovate or obliquely ovate to ovato-lanceolate bluntly pointed, variable in size up to 43 inches long by 1} broad, pinnately veined and the veins looped near the margin, veinlets beautifully reticulated, generally minutely dotted on the underside (under the lens), petiolules 2-3 lines long, stipules minute ovate-lanceolate early deciduous, panicles terminal glender shorter than the leaves with 3-5 racemose branches, flowers minute on pedicels about 4a line long with a bract, at the base of each, calyx closely pressed by 2 scale-like bracteoles, 5-parted, segments imbricate the three outer longer than the 2 inner all ciliate and conspicuously pellucid dotted, anthers 10 all fertile attached to the filament by the centre of the back, filaments slender nearly double as long as the calyx, hairy at the base equal or subequal in length or alternately a little shorter, ovary and style hairy the latter slightly longer than the filaments, stigma small capitate peltate, ovule solitary pendulous from near the apex of the cell, legume indehiscent obovate coriaceous or almost woody, 2-24 inches long by | inch broad, sometimes compressed at the base below the seed and wing-like and often with a small recurved mucro at the apex, seed pendulous from the apex, testa brown membranaceous, cotyledons replete with cells filled with balsam, the radicle and plumule protruding from the apex of the legume. Roxb. Fl. Ind. ii. 425. This tree is very common on the 8. Travancore ghats (Asamboo hills) in the dense moist forests up to 3000 feet elevation, and T have also found it on the Tinnevelly side just above Courtullum (between the 2nd and 3rd falls) and on the new Manjerabad ghat (S. Canara), about 1500 feet up from Siradi. The tree yields a dark red balsam almost exactly like the balsam of Copaiva, and with all the same properties + the tree is called in Travancore Matayen Samprani (which means fuol’s incense), and the balsam is extracted and used medicinally : 10 obtain at a deep notch is made into the heart of the tree, and after a time it begins to flow ; the tree flowers in March and April, and the legumes ripen in July. The wood is much used by the coffee planters and others for building purposes. The following is Mr, Broughton’s report upon some of the balsam which I submitted to him for analysis, This substance appears on examination to consist of a solution of certain chemically different resins in an essential oil, and is in fact an Oleo-resin. Like the wood oils from the different species of Dipterocarpus, it greatly resembles both in composition and properties the Copaiva bolsan, though it lacks the transparency and light yellow color of the latter. It is nearly entirely soluble in Ammonia but does not produce a clear solution, The essential out has the sume composition as that from Copaiva balsam. It boils (on the Neilgherries) at a fempe= vature of 225° C. It rotates the plane of polarization to the left, but ina different degree to that found with the oil from Copaiva. This essential oil oceurs in different amounts in the balsam, and more abundanily in the fresher collected specimens, these are quite fluid, but other specimens are almost semi-solid, doubtless owing to the evaporation and oxidation of the oil. The oil is best obtained by prolonged distillation of the balsam with water, By this means I have obtained from an apparently old specimen of balsam 25 per cent of oil, and in the most recently collected specimen I have obtained over 40 per cent. Ihave made many attempts, but have not obtained any crystals of Copaivice acid from the balsam. ‘The solid resins are of an acid character, but the balsam dozs not solidify so strongly as that of Copaiva after being heated with Magnesia. The oil can be separated from the bulsam by Acer's process, butt ts obtained in a very impure and colored state. There appears little doubt that this balsam could effectually substitute Copaiva balsam in medicine. But the appearance of the specimens that T have received is greatly inferior to the latter, und they could not certainly under present circumstances compete with the Brazilian balsam OD the European markets, Whether the essentiul ott obtained from the balsam could be profitably manufactured and exported Tam unable to say, as Iam not acquainted with the cost of the balsam in Travancore. This balsam is well worthy of being tried in medicine, since Srom its composition it appears to be well suited for employment, at least in the neighbourhood of the country in which it is collected. Analysis. 1. A flower bud showing the bract at hase of pedicel and 2 scale like bracteoles at base of calyx. 2. \oz This ts the valuable sandalwood tree, it is most abundant almost throughout the dry parts of Mysore, and in all the tracts t6 the east of the Nilgiris in the Collegal, Bhowani and Sattimangalum talugs of Coimbatore, anit in the Denkinacottah talug of Salem, less abundant on other hill tracts inthe Salem, Trichinopoly and N. Arcot districts, such as the Shevaroys, Kollay Mallays, Putche Mallays, Javadies, &c., and on the Palneys in Madura, and a variety with the wood almost scentless is found on our eastern coast mountains ; this was described by Roxburgh as the S. myrtifolium, but it only differs slightly in the shape of the leaves which are more lanceolate, and in the scaies or lobes of the disk being jagged. The tree is found up to about 4000 feet elevation, it is only the heart wood that gs scented and of any value, and trees grown slowly on rocky and dry poor soil produce the maximum of this, where the tree ts found in rich alluvial sei on the banks of rivers, &e., it is of very fine growth but produces | |no heart wood and is consequently valueless, it is often cultivated in gardens in the plains und may be seen in many gardens in Madras itself, the | / woo: tis yellow and deliciously fragrant, when unseasoned it weighs 72-75 lbs. and when seasoned 58 lbs., and its specific gravity is ‘924, it finds an \ immediate sale at 4 Rs. or 4-8-0 per maund of 28 lbs., and it is chiefly employed for making all sorts of ornamental articles, such as small tables, ‘ work boxes, glove bones, card cases, &c., a valuable oil used as a perfume is distilled from the roots, and chips or pieces of the heart wood. The tree is universally known in this presidency by the native name Sandal and Chundanum and the same tree is I believe found in parts of the Eastern Archipelago ; the wood andthe sawdust are burned as incense in native temples. The Forest Department have now large plantations of this valuable tree, it grows readily from seed if slightly shaded but is very shy of transplanting, and afler numerous ex periments the plan now found best is to sow 2 or 8 seeds in the pit where the tree is to stand and at the same time a few chili seeds round them, the latter grow wp before the Sandal seedlings and give them the necessary amount of shade whilst young, eventually the strongest of the 2 or 3 seedlings only is left in the pit the others being removed, Analysis. 1. The panicle or cyme, highly magnified. ~ 2. ) or > oe) bo rary iS) f=) =) as =< —} ) S =i io OS MYRISTICA FARQUHARIANA. (Nat. order Myristicez:) For Gen. Char. see letter-press to Pl. cclxvii. -Myristica FARQUHARIANA. (Wall.) A very handsome middling sized tree, trunk erect, branches regulatly verti- cellate and quite at right angles, young parts minutely rufo-pubescent, leaves coriaceous oblong with an abrupt fine acumiuation or more or less gradually acuminate, generally quite rounded at the base, glabrous and rather shining above, very glaucous but quite glabrous (in age) beneath, 54 to 12 inches long by 13-4? broad, primary veins 10-14 on each side inconspicuous above and not sunken, promi- nent beneath, intermediate parallel veins very incomplete but generally more or less visible on the under side, petioles 4-9 lines long, ‘channelled on the upper side. fale, flowers very numerous in-axillary much branched rufo-pubescent panicles, pedicels 2-3 lines long 6-10 together in clusters along the branch of the panicle with or without a short peduncle, and in the former case quite umbellate, perianth shorter than the pedicel 3-4 (generally 4) cleft pubescent om the outside and inside-on its upper half, antheriferous column scarcely-4 a line long glabrous not continued up between the anthers, anthers 7-11 (generally 7-8) produced back into a flat con- nective and all adnate into an oblong cone (but without any column between them) not much more than 3 as long as the perianth ; female, flowers 6-10 on short axillary rufo-pubescent racemes scarcely longer than the petioles, pedicels short thick or almost obsolete arranged along the whole-of the peduncle, ovary very huiry, stigma large semilunate deeply bifid glabrous and fieshy, fruit quite globose 1-1} inches in diameter glabrous in age. Wall. cat. 6798, and Hook. § 7. Fl. Ind. p. 161. in part. This tree is very abundant in the dense moist forests in the plainsof S. Cunsra, where it is called Pindee ; it also ascends the S. Canara und Coorg ghats up to an elevation of 1500 or 2050 feet, and Lhave also found tt-on the Tambercherry ghat in the Wynad, but ‘Fhave not observed it further south. Iknow nothing of its timber-or uses. Analysis. “Branch of the male tree in'flower, showing the loose panicle (life size.) Highly magnified portion of the panicle, -perianths 4-3-cleff. A male flower, perianth' 4-cleft. The same open. Authers shewing the very short colummat the base. The same in a more advanced stage, and the anthers slightly separated to show that they have ineurved points and a thir membranaceous connective down their inner face, and that the column is not-produced-up-between=them. 7. Branch of female tree iu’ flower, showing the Short axillary racemes (life size.) 8. Portion of a raceme magnified. 9, A 4-cleft female flower, “10. The same open. 11. ‘Ovary and 2 cleft lunate'fieshy glabrous stigma. 12. Ovary cut vertically. /13, The same cut transversely. 14. Branch of ripe fruit, one of them burst, showing the seed and mace or aril, (All drayn from flowers in- spirits.) Om wpe PL: COLXX za pects pee Hae bey ty iy MYRISTICA CORTICOSA. (Nat. order Myristicez.) For Gen. Char. see letter-press to Pl. cclzvii. MyRISTICA CORTICOSA. (Lour.) A very large érect handsome tree, young parts more or less downy often with a very dense close set golden tomentum, leaves from membranaceous to corlaceous, glabrous above in age, glabrous and very glaucous beneath or occasionally more or less aureo or rufo-pubescent especially on the costa, narrow-lanceolate to broad-lanceolate or rarely oblong or ovate, acute or with along tapering point or sometimes obtuse, 4-8 inches long by 1-3 broad, 16-20 primary veins on each side prominent beneath, and somewhat conspicuous above but not impressed, intermediate parallel incomplete veins present or absent, veinlets transversely reticulated conspicuous beneath, petioles 4-6 lines long channelled on the upper side, peduncles in both sexes axillary or from the old axils, 1-4 lines long, 1-6 flowered in the male 1-3 flowered in the female, pedicels 2-4 lines long rather more slender in the male than in the female bracteated above the middle and with the perianth densely aureo or rufo-tomentose, perianth-lobes rather deep, veined, tube larger in the female, 3-4 parted. fale, antheriferous column dilated at its apex into a circular 11-13 toothed disk, on each tooth of which an anther is inserted on the underside ; female, ovary oval hairy, stigma large 2 lobed, lobes somewhat lacerated, fruit oval densely downy about 14 inch long by 3 inch broad.—Knema corticosa, Lour. Fl. Coch. 742. Myristica globularia, Lam. M. glauca, Bl. Bidj. 576 ;—Rumph. 1. 182%. 60. M. lanceolaria, Wall. cat. 6742. M. missionis, Wall. cat. 6788. M. angustifolia, Roxb. Fl. Ind. iii. 847. A lofty very handsome tree, common in all our western moist forests up to 3000 feet elevation, from South Canara down to South Trvancore, very abundant about the foot of the Nilgiris west side (near Nellicootah), and about the Tinnevelly ghats. Some of my S. Canara specimens Lave the leaves quite ovate 5 inches long by 3 broad, but other forms run gradually into the narrow lanceolate shape which is most come mon ; the tree is also found in Birmah, from which country I have specimens quite corresponding to our Indian ones, and it inhabits the east part of Bengal, the Malay Peninsula, Java, Borneo and Cochin China. _ Analysis. 1. A branch of male tree in flower (sometimes the leaves are very much broader and in rare cases they are ovate.) A 3-cleft male flower with an 11-cleft antheriferous disk, lobes of the perianth with nerves, densely stellato- pubescent on the outside. 3. A 4-cleft male flower antheriferous disk 13-lobed. 4, Underneath view of the antheriferous-disk and its column shewing that the anthers are placed, underneath the teeth of the disk dehiscing downwards. 5. Anthers, upper and underneath view, the tooth of the disk being the connective. 6. A male flower bud. 7. A 4-cleft male perianth cut open, shewing its tube shorter than in the female. 8. Branch of female tree in flower. 9. A 8-cleft female flower tube longer than in the male. 10. The same cut open, hairy ovary and bifid somewhat lacerated stigma. 11. Ovary cut vertically. 12. Fruit. 13. The same burst, shewing the seed and its aril. (Drawn from living specimens.) PL: OCLUXI.. He HUI I 1 We jel . ii LOVE CLEIDION JAVANICUM. (Nat. order Euphorbiacew.) C LEIDION. Blume.—GEN. CHAR. Dizcious. Calyx 3-5 parted ; in the male valvate, in the female imbricate, petals none, disk none or sometimes present in the female. Male, stamens indefinite inserted on to a conical receptacle arranged in many verticels, filaments free attached to the centre of the anthers, connective often produced beyond the cells, anther cells dehiscing transversely, rudiment of ovary none ; female, ovary 2-3-celled, cells l-ovuled, ovules pendulous, styles 2-3 each with 2 long filiform papillose stigmas. Capsule 2-3-coccous, seeds exarillate globose ; cotyledons much longer than the radicle, cordate at the base. Trees or shrubs, leaves alternate, toothed penninerved, stipules soon caducous, male flowers axillary glo- merate in interrupted spikes or racemose or panicled, female flowers axillary, solitary or loosely racemose. Bl. Bijdr. p. 612 ;—DC. Prod. xv. p, 983. Redia, Casaretto, Psilostachys, Turcz. Lasiostyles, Presi. Tetraglossa, Bedd. in Mad. Lit. Journ. CLUIDION JAVANICUM. (BL) A middling sized glabrous tree, young shoots very minutely puberulous, leaves glabrous and generally shining above, rather coriaceous, from narrow lanceolate or elliptic-lanceolate to broad lanceolate, sub acute at the apex or with a short rather abrupt obtuse acumination, distantly serrated the serratures callous, sometimes furnished at the base -on the upper side with 2 hollow glands one on each side of the costa, 4-7 inches long by 1}-8 inches broad, petioles 1-1} inches long deeply channelled on the upper side, stipules ovate acuminate small deciduous, fale, racemes axillary slender from shorter to about as long as the leaves, flowers in small clusters of 3 to 8 together arranged along the common peduncle about 4 lines apart, pedicels 2-3 lines long bracteoled at the base, calyx 14 lines long 3-parted slightly pubescent, the connective of the anthers produced beyond the cells ; female, flowers solitary, peduncles bracteated, 6-12 lines long elongating as the fruit swells to 2-3 inches long, calyx 5 parted ciliate, ovary 2-3 lobed, 2-3 celled, ovules solitary in the cells pendulous, styles 2-3 united at the base into a single column branching upwards and each furnished with 2 long papillose stigmas, the whole 6-8 lines long but elongating to more than 1 inch as the fruit advances, capsules generally 2 lobed about 8 lines in diameter, cocci hard. Bl. Bidj, p. 613. Lasiostyles salicifolia, Presl. Bot. Bemerk. p. 149. Rottlera urandra, Dalz. Bombay Flora p. 230. This tree is common in the moist forests on the Anamallays (Anagoody shola and elsewhere) elevation 2000-3050 feet, Travancore moist forests below ghats, and elsewhere in our western forests, and is also found on the Bombay ghats, in Ceylon, Bengal, Birna, Java, &c. ; the timber is said by the natives to be hard and good for building purposes. The female flowers have often 3 styles and 3 cells to the ovary. Analysts. The Figure represents a branch of the male tree in flower. Male flower buds, calyx valvate. Full male flowers, showing the 3-parted calyx and the numerous stamens seated on a conical receptacle. Anthers, front and back view, dehiscence transverse. Portion of a branch from a female tree in flower, peduncle solitary axillary 1-flowered furnished with bracts. A 2-styled flower more advanced, peduncle shortened. A 3-styled flower still more advanced, peduncle shortened. Female calyx, 5-parted imbricate. A stigma, much magnified. 10. Ovary cut vertically, ovules pendulous. 11. A 2-celled ovary cut transversely, cells 2-ovuled. 12. PL: CCLXYXXIL s Bo is idwdlerit, Jduataii {dell ey alee, Gai Hats #50) w: Hie SitStiipirs feel ee Kero Biallesy wolei win wee Nb fue RHR TU EO oIUOhY CeO e eit) &: CHI Dees FOAM uC Re ANTE GY Ss DOWD ceed bee OF wee ee PS BETIS BeGRLOL S i Glee ya erel ba ; Benen DAOl sg 10 Ne bist AD RN Gh e GOR | t : Comers offs 10 bhed Wage ) fy chard UOWOR PIOKL IE Onna one Beit 4 “12 eee oe SIS ue (astioeinl) Mornay ay ond VourGL atin we ; AS wanes Goyron Bit Pee delercwe C.60t Ie ent a HYMVEIsI Si GEE 4 Su hee Hk Manage saat AP eae i j . YO: 80. its) st it Salle booties werliie Hild a kiss lh panne (ts ale HOKE Ve oh Hd) PALES ; Eatttirs Mert) CROYON SCABIOSUM. (Nat. order Euphorbiacew. ) CROTON. Zinn.—GEN. CHAR. Monecious or rarely digecious, Male, calyx 5 (rarely 4-6) parted valvyate or imbricate, petals as many a3 the calyx-lobes and alternate with them, or sometimes obsolete or more or less rudimentary imbricate in estivation, disk dilated into 5 glands alternate witk the petals, stamens central usually 10-20 (rarely fewer or very numerous), filaments free basifixed, anthers adnate 2-celled, rudiment of ovary 0. Female, calyx as in the male, petals more or less rudimentary or none, disk asin the male or often less developed ; ovary 3-(rarely 2-4)-celled, cells 1-ovuled, ovules pendulous, styles 3 (rarely 2-4) 2-cleft or branched. Fruit a capsule dividing into 2 valved cocci, albumen present, cotyledons ovate equalling the radicle. Trees, shrubs or herbs, leaves alternate entire or divided petioled penniveined or 3-5-nerved, racemes or spikes terminal usually with the male flowers numerous above and a few female flowers below.—Tridesmis, Zour. Astrogyne, Benth. Dacarinium, Drepadenium and Heptalla, Rain. Hendecandra, Hschw. Pentalostigma, Mart. Argyrodendron, Astrea, Barhamia, Brachystachys, Cleodora, Codonocalys, Crotonanthus, Cyclustigma, Engelmania, Eutropia, Geiseleria, Lasiogyne, Leucadenia, Medea, Ocalia, Pilinophyton, Podocalyx, Podostachys, Liglium, Timandra, K/otzch. Geiseleria, Mig. Angelandra; Endl. Gynamblosis, Torr. Calyptriopetalum, Hassk, Klotzschiophyton, Baill, Aubertia and Monguia, Chapel. Argyra, Noronha. Anisophyllum and Furearia, Boiv. Myriogomphus, Fr. Diedrichs. Croton SCABIOSUM. (Bedd.) A small tree, young branches, both sides of the leaves, inflorescence, fruit, and in fact every part of the plant densely covered with close-set silvery smooth scab-like scales, leaves rather coriaceous ovate to cordate acute slightly and irregularly toothed, 2-43 inches long by 14-8 broad, golden when young silvery in age particularly beneath, 3-5 nerved at or a little above the base without glands round the margins, petioles 8-24 lines long often with 2 conspicuous round glands at the apex on the upper side, stipules lanceolate acute 3-4 lines long sometimes toothed at the margins, racemes short generally from the apex of small lateral branches. ale, flowers numerous about 24 lines long solitary or 2-3 together from a small ovate acute concave bract, pedicels about a line long. Female, flowers generally 1-2 at the base of the raceme a little longer than the males, petals of the male ligulate densely white-woolly round the margins and at the base, disk of 5 two-lobed prominent glands opposite the calyx- segments, stamens 10, filaments glabrous, anthers basifixed, connective very broad and running up the whole anther, the cells ad- nate to the sides, petals in the female small linear ciliate sometimes obsolete or only 1-2 present, ovary 38-celled, styles deeply 2- cleft the divisions entire smooth filiform recurved and ending in a fine point, fruit 5-6 lines long 3-lobed, seed smooth with a con- spicuous scar. I have only found this very distinct species on the Nullay Mallay mountains, Kurnool district, where it is most abundant about the Ferrachalina (2000-8000 feet elevation) ; its very silvery appearance renders vt highly ornamental. Analysis. a Portion of a leaf magnified, showing the dense scab-like glabrous silvery scales. Inflorescence at the apex of 2 lateral ramuli, life size (flowers all male in this instance ; there are generally 1-2 females present at the base of the raceme.) A branch (life size) showing a raceme with 1 fruit at the base, and male flower buds at apex. A male flower bud. ‘ A male flower, stamens 10. i) aah The male flower opened, showing the insertion of the petals and stamens, and the 5 two-lobed glands of the disk, no rudiment of ovary. A petal. Authers front and back view, the thick connective runs up the entire centre so that the front and back view is exactly the same. 9. A female flower, only 1 rudimentary petal present, 2 styles (there are generally 3), stigmas filiform entire. 10, A female calyx opened, the segments rather unequal. 11. A petal from female flower. 12, Ovary cut vertically, ovules pendulous. 13. Ovary cut transversely, 3-celled each 1-ovuled. 14. A seed, the scar or hilum prominent. (Drawn from dried specimens.) Fig. A. represents a female flower, an anther, and portion of a leaf from the male of Croton aromaticum, (vide Manual.) on 283 vy PL CCLYNYIU LLL ~~ CHG@TOCARPUS CASTANOCARPUS. (Nat. order Euphorbiacez.) CH@TOCARPUS. Thw.—GEN. CHAR. Dizcious. Calyx in both sexes 4-parted imbricate in estivation, petals 0, disk irregularly lobed. Male, stamens 8-16 joined below into a central pilose column round the rudimentary ovary, filaments free above, the exterior alternate with the sepals and lobes of the disk, anthers introrse sub-basifixed, 2-celled dehiscing longitudinally, rudiment of ovary entire or 2-3 fid. Female, ovary surrounded by the lobed disk 3-celled, cells 1-ovuled, ovules pendulous, styles 3 bifid to nearly the base fimbriate, fruit a capsule echinate or warty dehiscing loculicidally with hard valves, seed ovate shining pendulous furnished with a large 2-lobed fleshy caruncle, cotyledons plane foliaceous in copious albumen, radicle very short superior. Trees, leaves alternate bistipulate petioled penniveined coriaceous entire without glands, flowers small fascicled in the axils, shortly pedicelled or subsessile furnished with scale-like bracts. hw. in Hook. Lond. Journ. of Bot. vi. p. 300. CH@TOCARPUS CASTANOCARPUS. (Roxb.) A tree variable in size, sometimes large, sometimes middling sized, or small and much branched; young parts minutely pubescent, leaves oblong or ovate-oblong to broad lanceolate with a long acumination, entire glabrous 3 to 9 inches long by 1} to 3 inches broad ; petioles 3-4 lines long, stipules falcate, flowers axillary slightly pubescent, the male more crowded about 2 lines long, stamens 8, the female slightly larger, bracts pubescent scale-like, fruit subspherical as large as a nutmeg echinate with rigid inoffensive fragile yellowish-brown bristles, caruncle crimson.—Adelia castanicarpa, Rowb. Fl. Ind. iii. p. 848. Choetocarpus, Zhw. Hn. Pl. Zey. p. 275. Var. B. pubescens.—Young branches.and under surface of the leaves more or less pubescent. Ceylon, common in the Ratnapura and Ambagamwa districts; Var. B in the Pasdoon Corle ; also found in Silhet, Khasia, Birmah, &é., 50 that it very probably occurs in our Western ghat forests, but I have not met with it. The timber is very hard and in use for building purposes. Analysis. I Branch of a female tree in young fruit (the glabrous variety.) Portion of a branch from a male tree in flower. Portion of a branch of a male tree (Var. 6 pubescens.) A male flower bud, 2 opposite pair of imbricate segments. A young male flower on first opening. A full male flower showing the lobed crenulate disk and the 8 stamens joined in a central column round the abertive ovary. Anthers, front and back view. Female flower, 2 sepals removed to show disk, the echinate ovary and styles. The same cut vertically, 3 cells each 1-ovuled. A fruit cut vertically, seeds pendulous (in this instance small and aborting.) Ripe fruit of Chcetocarpus coriaceus (life size.) 12. Vertical section of the same. 13, 14. Seed cut open vertically, showing the foliaceous thin cotyledons seatedin the albumen and the minute superior radicle near the hilum, (Drawn from dried specimens ) ya el BOs oar aX Po 284 PLOCLYIXIV | G A 2 lye foci: y Sep hae i yeeey Ge Se Er iia is tas HOUT eGR ats ay id fl tice Siete ae LT OODREDE DRAG veshtGl Aas Carolus yin Re th Una UE ie sn gd) pte tO ees, 2) NSP a ET ities . OOROH TALE eat d PLENTY th ¢ BOLT AIBC GF he Piso rt OSE AERA Mercer tae inde Ibe) ihe Riper i IRS CADIS Hath Hctos 00 Lelie in rast ilies ait ae Bond wn4 4 ftv ATR ff) Mi an Gd ee ir Gah ahs tnd wail: (Oa rag tose) fis raya ve cae atte + * ae 5 20 E Rae meee OE NAR) eHiliwnehy h iy ; : ee Let Van eee GIVOTIA ROTTLERIFORMIS. (Nat, order Euphorbiacez.) GIVOTIA, Grif.—GEN. CHAR. Discious, Calyx 5-parted imbricate, petals 5 alternate with the calyx-segments. Male, disk large fleshy 5-lobed the lobes alternate with the petals, stamens central 16-15 (10 inner long, 6 outer short) more or less united into a very short column at the base but some quite free, filaments free above and hairy on their lower half, anthers 2-celled dehiscing longitudinally fixed by the centre of the back, no rudi- ment of ovary. Female, disk annular sub 5-lobed, ovary 2-3-celled, cells 1-ovuled, ovules pendulous, styles 2-3 each 2-cleft, fruita drupe witha hard 1-seeded nut, seed exarillate, albumen copious, cotyledons broad foliaceous palmatinerved, radicle short superior. A tree, leaves alternate cordate long-petioled palmatinerved and with all the young parts densely stellato-pubescent ; flowers in long terminal panicles. Griff. Pl. Hort. Calc. 14. (ex Endl.) Govania, Wall. Cat. 7851. GIVOTIA ROTTLERIFORMIS. (Griff.) A middling sized tree, leaves cordate or broadly ovate, somewhat lobed and scollop-toothed acute at the apex, without glands, 7-nerved, densely pubescent on both sides when young, in age more glabrous above, but covered with dense white down beneath, 4-6 inches long by 34-6 broad, petioles 3-5 inches long sometimes with 2 pro- minent glands about the middle, panicles 10-20 inches long covered with dense white stellate pubescence, flowers congested at the apex of the branchlets, bracts filiform 3 lines long, flowers about 4 lines long as in the generic character, 2 of the segments of the calyx with a blunt appendage on the outside below the apex, fruit oblong the size of a pigeon’s egg. Wight Icones. tab. 1889. A very common tree in all diy subalpine forests on the west side of this Presidency, also on our eastern mountains and in Ceylon ; vt is called Tella Poonkee in Teligu, Venddle in Tamil ; the wood is very light and soft and used to make toys, imitation fruit, boxes, &c., and catama- rans ; it takes paint very well; the seed yields an oil valuable for fine machinery. Analysis. 1, Branch of a male tree in flower. 2. A male flower bud, sepals imbricate. 3, 4. Male flowers, 2 of the sepals with an appendage on the outside below the apex, petals imbricate. 5. Calyx cut open. 6. The 5-lobed disk aud stamens removed from the flower, filaments 16, some free others connate, the 6 outer ones shorter than the 10 inner. 7. Anthers front and back view, filaments attached to centre of the back of the anther. 8. A few anthers removed from the column to show that they are connate at the base, (All drawn from living specimens.) 2. Views of the female flower and ovary copied from Dr. Wight’s drawing (as I have no specimens of the female at hand.) 285 PL:COLXXXV. Derr Tet ‘ ae eae NPS ON Rah ns ait a a Wael eig cas ; aps ait kh 6a ya af tral Maia Gel Ao bly. ; sf aid Us Tia epi nnanty pals APOROSA LINDLEYANA. (Nat. order Euphorbiacez.) APOROSA, Blume.—GEN. CHAR. Dizcious, petals and disk 0 in both sexes, Male, calyx 3-6 generally 4-parted imbricate, stamens 2-5, rudiment of an ovary minute or absent, filaments free,*anther cells distinct globular dehiscing longitudinally. Female, calyx 4-6-parted imbricate, ovary 2-3-celled with 2 pendulous ovules in each cell, styles equal in number to cells of ovary very shortly united short recurved retuse or 2-lobed, drupes 2-3- celled or often only 1-celled by abortion, with a single seed in each cell. Trees or shrubs, leaves alternate petioled bistipulate generally lanceolato-ovate, penniveined entire or toothed, the male inflorescence in catkins, the female in axillary clusters or short spikes, Bl. Bijdr. p. 514. Leiocarpus, Bl. 1. c. 581. Lepidostachys, Lindley. Scepa, Lind. Tetractinostigma, Hassk, APporosa LINDLEYANA. (Wight.) A small or middling sized tree, gemme puberulous, branches glabrous, leaves glabrous lanceolato-ovate acute or obtuse at the base and apex, entire, 4-6 inches long by 13-23 broad, petioles 3-4 lines long. Stipules ovate-oblong obtuse erect very membranaceous soon caducous a little pilose on the outside, 5 lines long by 2-3 lines broad. Male, catkins sessile often forked about 1 inch long solitary or 2-3 together at the old axils or axillary, bracts broader than long ciliate fimbriato-denticulate, calyx 4-6 parted, segments obovate or rhomboid ciliate about 3a line long, anthers 2-5 more or less exserted. Female, spikes solitary or twin, about 3 lines long densely bracteate, bracts broad ovate ciliate, flowers on pedicels 3 to 1 line long, calyx generally 5-parted, segments broad ovate very small, ovary ovoid acute fulvyo-pilose 2-3-celled, stigmas short bifid papillose, ovules pendulous from an enlarged placenta which reaches more than 3 down the cells and which has a projection 4 covering the ovule, fruit subglobose shortly apiculate 3 an inch long subsessile or on a pedicel 1-2 lines long.—Scepa Lindleyana, Wight Icones tab. 361. This tree is most abundant throughout Coorg and the Wynaad up to 4000 feet elevation, and is to be met with throughout our western forests, Bombay and Ceylon, and is also found in Sikkim ; in South Canara it ts called Sulla, and in Mysore Surroli (both Canarese names), and in Ceylon Kabella ; the wood is in use for building and other purposes. Analysis. _ A branch of a male tree in flower (life size-) Portion of a male catkin magnified, A 4-sepaled male flower with 2 stamens and a minute abortive ovary. A 4-sepaled male flower with 3 stamens and an abortive ovary. A 4-sepaled male flower with 5 stamens and no rudiment of an ovary. A 6-sepaled flower with 4 stamens, no rudiment of ovary. A segment of the-calyx showing the margin ciliate. Anthers, front and back view. A branch of female tree in flower (life size.) 10. A 2-styled female flower, 11. A 3-styled female flower. 12. A lobe of stigma. 13. Transverse section of an ovary from a 2-styled flower, 2 cells, each with 2 ovules. 14. Transverse section of an ovary from a 3-styled flower. 15, Vertical section of an ovary showing the very large placentas lobed over the upper portion of the pendulous ovules. (All the above drawn from fresh specimens.) Views of the fruit, seed and embryo, copied from Dr. Wight’s drawing, as I have no fruit at hand. OD Mm wo Figures 16 to 20. im) 192) Oo EMEC te eens ie MACARANGA TOMENTOSA. (Nat. order Euphorbiacez.) MACARANGA. Thouars.—GEN. CHAR. Dizcious, petals and disk 0. Male, calyx valvate, stamens 2-8 or numerous (but less than in Mallotus), rarely only 1 central, seated on the subconvex receptacle and irregularly verticellate, anthers 3-4-celled fixed by the back with the connective incomplete and shorter than the cells, no rudiment of an ovary. Female, calyx imbricate, ovary 1-6-celled cells l-ovuled, fruit a capsule, seed not carun— culate albuminous, cotyledons broad much longer than the radicle. Trees, leaves alternate peltate and palmatinerved, or lanceolate and penniveined, in- florescence very various glomerate or fasciculate or in axillary spikes, racemes or panicles, Pet. Thouars Gen. Madagas. p. 26 t. 88 ;—DC. Prod. xv. p. 987. Pachystemon, Bl. Bijdr. p. 626. Mappa, Adr. Juss. Adisca, Zolling. Mecostylis, Kurz. Panhopia, Noronha. Claoxylisp., Wight. Osyris sp., Roxb. Section HuMAcaRANGA.— Anthers 4-valved, ovary 1-celled. MACARANGA TOMENTOSA. (Wight.) A small or middling sized tree, the young parts more or less densely stellato-tomentose, leaves orbicular with a longish acumination, subentire or with minute teeth at the excurrent veins, peltate, scarcely coriaceous, in age subglabrous above except the costa and primary veins which are mealy-puberulous, more or less tomentose or pubescent beneath and there furnished with numerous minute waxy dot-like glands, 6-8 inches long by nearly as broad, palmately 9-nerved at the insertion of the petiole, pinnately veined above, veinlets parallel very regular and prominent, petiole 2-5 inches long terete, stipules large triangularo-ovate acuminate tomentose. J/ale, panicles axillary and from the old axils from a little shorter to nearly as long as the leaves, much branched, flowers in interrupted sessile heads, bracts 2-23 lines long tomentoso-ovate to obovate or 3-lobed dentate, venose many flowered, calyx deeply 38-lobed, lobes cuneate obovate hairy on the outside, filaments 2 or 3 free about as long as the calyx. Female, panicles much shorter than in the male and less compound, bracts as in the male but rather smaller 1-2 flowered, pedicels 2-3 lines long; calyx subentire, ovary subglobose, much incurved, stigma subovoid obtuse lateral, capsule globose scarcely 3 lines in diameter densely covered with waxy dot-like glands, seed globose sub- scrobiculate, testa crustaceous. Wight Icones tab. 1949. fig. i. § fig ii. No. 9 ;—DC. Prod. xv. p. 1010. A very common tree in all our western forests and in Bombay and Ceylon, generally affecting old clearings of forest and often planted ”" for shade by coffee planters ; called Vatte Kanni in Tamil, Upligi and Upalkai in Canarese (S. Canara), Chenthakanni in Mysore (Canarese J, Chanda in the Bombay Presidency, and Kanda in Ceylon ; a gum exudes from the tree which is used medicinal’y by the natives and for taking UAE « impressions ; the timber is soft and useless, the tree is of very rapid growth. Dif, Atrtar yf Gl j Analysis. A branch of male tree in flower. The flowers and bracts. A 3-lobed bract. A flower with 2 stamens, calyx 3-lubed A flower with 3 stamens, calyx 3.lobed. The 4-celled anther. A lobe of the calyx. (All drawn from living specimens.) Portion of a branch of a female tree in fruit. A bract from the female panicle. COnranrovn = 10. A female flower rather advanced, stigma lateral, ovary and stigma covered with glands. 11. The same cut vertically showing the single cell and solitary erect ovule. (Drawn from dried specimens.) Fig. 4. Dissections of M. Indica, (See Manual.) 287 We a 4 Figs. Ngcapaegen Joc pk ties 2 amt ay Sra ¥, > XS ~ WS iS S ~ @ Me Uae ve vibieg: a to Pou ae aioe STG je fants Hed ahiict on ts gun) DAPHNIPHYLLUM ROXBURGHBII. (Nat. order Euphorbiaces ?) DAPHNIPHYLLUM. Blume.—GEN. CHAR. Diecious. Calyx very small 3-8 parted, petals 0 or jrudimentary. Male, stamens 5-12, anthers 2-celled dehiscing longitudinally ovate thick on very short filaments radiating from a central disk. Female, ovary ovoid incompletely 2-celled with 2 pendulous ovules ineach cell. Styles 2 united at the base shortly recurved undivided, stigmas papillose, berry ovoid indehiscent, seed solitary, embryo minute at the apex of a thick fleshy albumen, radicle superior. Trees or shrubs, leaves alternate on long petioles entire coriaceous, flowers in axillary or late- ral racemes. Blume. Goughia, Wight Icones 1879. Gyrandra, Wall. DAPHNIPHYLLUM RoXBURGHII. (Baillon.) A good sized glabrous tree, leaves oblong or subobovate gene- rally obtuse or retuse with a small mucro, more rarely acute or acuminate very coriaceous, 3 to 43 inches long by 13-2 broad, dark shining green above glaucous beneath, petioles 1-14 inches long channelled above, racemes axillary from a little shorter to a little longer than the petioles. Male, calyx minute and soon deciduous but exceeding the filaments, stamens about 8. Female, calyx 5-6 parted, the segments very unequal, generally 2-3 nearly equalling the ovary, the others very small, rudimentary, petals 2-5 or altogether wanting, irregular and unequal opposite or alternate with the segments of the calyx, styles short spreading, ovary glaucous, drupe oblong about 3 an inch long crowned with the remains of the styles, nut hard and rugged. Barllon. Euph. 565. Goughia Neilgherrense, Wight Icones tab. 1878-79. A very common tree on the Nilgiris, Pulneys, and Anamallays, and other mountains on the west side of the Presidency, and in Ceylon at elevations from 4000 feet upwards, also indigenous in Hong-kong, Loochoo, Corea and in Japan ; called Nir-chappay by the Burghers on the Nil- giris ; the wood is very inferior but makes excellent fuel. Its foliage makes it highly ornamental for shrubberies, dc. Analysis. Branch of female tree in flower and fruit. A female flower. A 6-parted calyx opened, no petals present. A 5-parted calyx opened, showing the presence of 5 rudimentary petals. Ovary cut vertically, ovules pendulous. Ovary cut transversely, incompletely 2-celled, the cells 2-ovuled. Ripe fruit cut vertically. The hard putamen or nut. The embryo. 10, 11, 12, Branch of male tree and male flowers, copied from Dr. Wight’s drawing. Nos, 1 to 9 drawn from living specimens collected on the Nilgiris, Ww HOIST oy > 288 se CLAYXUIN, PL:C MALLOTUS PHILIPPINENSIS. (Nat, order Euphorbiacez.) MALLOTUS, Zour.—GEN. CHAR. Dizcious or rarely monzcious, calyx 2-5 cleft, valvate, petals none, disk none or very rarely present in the female flower. Male, stamens numerous central free or shortly united at the base, anthers 2-celled, rudiment of ovary none, or rarely a minute one present. Female, ovary 3-(or rarely 2-5-) celled, cells 1-ovuled, styles as many as the ovary cells, simple recurved usually densely plumose on the inner side, capsule dividing into 3 (or rarely 2-5) cocci, seed ecarunculate, albumen copious, cotyledons broad, radicle short. Trees or shrubs, leaves alternate or opposite 3-5 nerved at the base bistipulate entire toothed or lobed, usually with 2 depressed glands at the base, flowers in racemes or spikes terminal or very rarely axillary. Zour. Fl. Cochinch. p. 781. Rottlera, Roxb. Echinus, Lowr. Hlateriospermum, Blume. Melanolepis, Reichend. Boutonia, Boj. Cordemoya, Bajli, Adisca, Bl. Echinocroton, Mueller, Hancea, Seem. Axenfeldia, Baitl, Plagianthera, Reichenb. Mat.otus PHILIPPINENSIS. (Lam.) A middling sized tree, young branches minutely hoary tomentose, leaves oblongo- elliptic to ovate obtuse or with a long acumination, 3-6 inches long entire rather coriaceous, glabrous above except when young minutely hoary tomentose or often glaucous beneath and there furnished with minute red glands 3-nerved at the base, furnished at the baseon the upper side with 2 depressed glands, petioles 4-2 inches long terminal at the apex, spikes axillary and terminal dense and paniculate in the male, generally solitary in the female, 3-4 inches long, bracts triangular ovate acute 3-flowered in the male and 1-flower- ed in the female, flowers small, calyx hoary tomentose and furnished with red glands, stamens about 26, anthers glandular, styles shortly united with plumose recurved branches, capsule 3 coccous, each of the cocci the size of a small pea, covered with red glandular tomentum. DC, Prod, xv. 980. Croton Philippinensis, Lam. Hney, vcl. 2, p. 206. C- punctatus, Retz. C. coccineus, Lam. C. montanus, Willd. Rottlera tinctoria, Row). Ll, ind. iii. p. 827. R. aurantiaca, Hook. et Arn. Nt. affinis, Hassh. This tree is common throughout the Madras presidency, and in Bengal, Bombay, Birmah, Ceylon, &c., and it is also found in Sava, the Philippines, Australia and Hongkong. In Southern India it ascends the mountains to about 5000 feet, but is also common in the forests of the plains ; the wood is occasionally used by the natives for ordinary purposes, and the bark is in use for tanning. The red mealy powder off the cap- sules is @ valuable product and might be a source of considerable revenue in many of our forest districts; it is used as an orange dye principally for silk. The ripe capsules are gathered in March and rubbed together or shaken in bags till the farina separates. It is known as Kapli or Kamila powder, and the silk dyers use the following method :—4 warts of the powder, part of powdered alum, 2 purts of salts of sodx, rubbed well together with oil of Sesamum andthen boiled in water ; it is sufficient however to mix it with water containing 3 its weight of carbonate of soda. The gowder is much adulterated in our bazaars, but some collected carefully by the Forest Department, realized a high price in the Lnglish markets, The tree is called Kapli almost throughout this Presidency, and is known by the names of Kameel and Kamila in Hindoostani ; and in Ceylon it is called Hamparandella, andin Bombay Shendree ; the powder is also supposed to be of value as a vermifuge. Analysis. 1. < le) ic) —! a] PETS: 2 SE EL Wie eeu tO (VA A Be BY EH ie tan) i) hy) ROS Sep » vat alae Seley hie Wa ED 28. ECS ACOs ag, 2) we it Peano eget a ee fy Anis vada ‘ ale A) QAO iri taea TL oath hoy HORII e DOR hee EINE ; hee Bb RAYA V4, MANET, ety isk aint : (dy MONOMER Mees -Eegaseeek thie ay HBR TONS IA SIY, a la i es op Se “ih ahi Lair Gea Nay Hanns AO ie se OW, Ml A Way we Li Me ie Acciy Aine a AMEN Ut hayit kis temhe Roar ae See (ose) ue PER LEA OE NMIGIOA SBME SST} Coa Lue te 3 eS (SAA MUAHO SIG) dis SH NASRAIN' gh hate Bik « HP #0 Mi : mah bans +e aes. Paes nh dewes 7: bine aed ik . rt De Seated ae chinks Asari, Wetiys: iF ; STARE ENA SS ACLS ee OKO ROP a ot aa pee bene she ie Acie eo (Sue : Sea tiet A Rina yeh eet Bee) PB BINES Th ity 0 pee eee RSs Bey ds Pea. “Oe y NGhintyat Lo eRe). a LE Bat pecan ais papi ohsigs Sa” P ne Selby ies ALSEODAPHNE SEMICARPIFOLIA. (Nat. order Laurinez.) ALSEODAPHNE, Nees.—GEN. CHAR. Flowers hermathrodite, calyx deeply 6-parted, lobes subequal deciduous from the hase, fertile stamens 9, filaments filiform or dilated, the 3 inner furnished with 2 subsessile glands near the base ; anthers ovato-oblong 4-celled, those of the 6 outer stamens introrse, those of the 3 inner extrorse. Staminodes 3 stipitate cordate or sagittate at the apex. Style filiform, stigma discoid or obtusely subtrigonal, berry seated on the entire smooth base of the calyx, the pedicels thickened. Trees, leaves alternate coriaceous penniveined, inflorescence of Cinramomum, outer segments of calyx usually shorter than the inner ones, ALSEODAPHNE SEMICARPIFOLIA. (Nees.) A large tree, glabrous except the very young shoots, leaves obovate oval or ovate obtuse narrowed at the base, rounded at the apex, coriaceons glabrous and somewhat shining above, glaucous beneath, finely reticulated on both sides, 3-9 inches long by 14 to 4 inches broad, petiole 3-9 lines long, panicles axillary or from the old axils 24-10 inches long corymbosely branched towards the apex, calyx 14-2 lines long, lobes equal, fruit oblong 4-8 lines long by 3-6 lines broad, pedicel thickened 3-10 lines long. Nees ;—DC. Prod. xv. p. 28 ;—Wight Icones PJ. 1826 27. This tree is not uncommon on the Western Ghats of this presidency, from Canara down to Cape Comorin, up to 500) feet elevation, and it also occurs in Ceylon. There are 2 different forms or varieties, one with the leaves 3-4 inches long, and the other with the leaves 6-9 inches long. I have not observed that the 2 forms run one into the other, and I have only met with the smaller leaved variety at the higher altitudes, so suspect that the difference is due to elevation. This tree is known in Ceylon under the names Weewarqna, Raane (girainwood J, and Vaverne, and is there || known as a valuable timber ; the wood is procurable of very large size, and ts of a light yellow color, and is said not to warp ; it is used for building and other purposes, and as it resists the attacks of the teredo, is much in use in the construction of boats ; it is exported from Trincomalee. Analysis. The figure represents the smaller leaved form. 1, A flower bud. 2. iN < eer) Suto Gh, Ye ? oi . NADA OAKS NY he ida Pecan bi ayy En See ee ae ee aes ie BINAS As) 3p Riba AEN | DOGGONE RT ay un want t am ANTIARIS INNOXIA. (Nat. order Urticez.) ANTIARIS, Leschen.—_GEN. CHAR- Flowers monzcious. Male involucre many-flowered many-leaved, leaflets imbricate connate at the base surrounding an orbicular flat or convex receptacle, florets sessile dense-packed, perianth of 3-4 spathulate leaflets connivent towards the apex, stamens 3-8 on a flat receptacle, filaments obsolete or very short, anthers extrorse 2-celled. Female involucre 1-flowered, urceolate many cleft at the apex, perianth none, ovary connate with the involucre 1-celled, ovule 1 pendulous from the apex of the cell anatropal. Style terminal bifid the divisions filiform stigmatose, drupe formed of the baccate involucre, seed pendulous, Embryo exalbuminous orthotropal, cotyledons large fleshy ovate plano: convex smooth, radicle very short superior. Trees, leaves simple alternate stipulate, peduncles axillary. ANTIARIS INNOXIA. (Blume) A gigantic tree up to 250 feet in height and of enormous girth, leaves oblong-elliptic dentate serrulate or entire, scabrous, about 6 inches long by 2-2} inch broad, petioles 3 lines long. Male flowers with 3-8 stamens, the perianth leaves generally 4 obovate spathulate cucullate hairy on the outside, fruit size of a nut, purple. 2B. Rump. 1. 172 & dd. A. saccidora, Dalz in Hook. Journ. Bot. tii. 231 ;—Wight Icones tab. 1958. A. toxicaria, Hook. Comp. to Bot. Mag.i. 311 t.17. Lepurandra saccidora, Nimmo Pl. of Bombay 198. This is the largest tree ti our forests ; it is common along all the Western Ghats from Bombay down to Cape Comorin, andis also found in Ceylon ; in the Anamallays it is called Alli, in Bombay Juzoogri, and in Ceylon Rittt. It flowers in the rains and ripens its fruit in Janu. ary. The wood is soft and of no value, the nuts are intensely bitter and contain an axotized principle, which may prove an active medical agent. On wounding the fruit a milky viscid fluid exudes which hardens into a waxz-like substance and becomes black and shining ; the inner bark of the tree is composed of very strong tenacious fibres and is adapted for cordage or matting. In Coorg and Wynaad the hill men manufacture sacks from this tree: a branch or trunk ts cut corresponding to the length and breadth of the sack required, it is soaked a little, and then beaten with clubs until the fibre separates from the wood ; this done the sack formed of the bark is turned inside out and the wood sawn off, leaving a small piece at the bottom of the sack ; these sacks are in general use for carrying rice, dc. The male flowers have been described as having 4 stamens each opposite a leaflet of the perianth; my analysis differs considerably, the stamens being always 5-8. The drawings were, however, made from living flowers collected on the Nilgiris. Analysis. The figure represents a branch of the tree, shewing the solitary female flowers and the male flowers collected in dense heads. 1. Female flower. 2. Female flower cut vertically, shewing the solitary pendulous ovule. 3. Young fruit, 4. The same cut transversely. 5&6. Seed and embryo. 7&8. Male inflorescence collected in dense heads. 9. A male flower, 5 stamens on a flat receptacle. 10. Male flower shewing 6 stamens. Il. Male flower with 8 stamens. 12 £13, Front and back view of the obovate spathulate petals. 14, Anther, front view. Anther, back view. The drawings of the branch in flower and the female dissections (1 to 6) communicated by Dr. Thwaites oe Ceylon specimens) ; the male dissections (7 to 15) from living specimens collected on the western slopes of the Vilgiris, PL: COCVIL | Dieses) Dette: ee ie Peiiss: a eee eee CE eee Onn Se a ms Weeati, wegen ptt SRVETH A ost Catron: Be eo Hh dag 4) , i vy J Mines mei BALL Brie tts 4 tee tye 139 ie) dee ane nee wrt . Rip a ARTOCARPUS HIRSUTA. (Nat. order Urticez.) ARTOCARPUS, Linn.—GEN. CHAR. Flowers monecious, minute, densely packed on the outside of a globose or oblong succulent recep- tacle, the males and females in separate heads. Male flowers: Perianth of 2 to 4 segments, imbricate in the bud. Stamen 1. Female flowers: Perianth tubular entire. Style usually simple and linear, protruding from the perianth. Ovary usually 1-celled, with 1 pendulous ovule. Fruit compound, consist< ing of the somewhat enlarged persistent and consolidated perianths, each enclosing a minute nut. Seeds without albumen. Trees or shrubs, with milky juice. Leaves alternate, entire or divided. Flower-heads axillary or terminal solitary or 2 together. ARTOCARPUS HIRSUTA, (Lam.) A very lofty tree attaining upwards of 200 feet in height and of great girth, young parts hirsute, leaves ovate to oval (those of saplings or occasionally a few on older trees deeply pinnatifid and serrate) entire acute ox obtuse, glabrous above in age, hairy underneath particularly on the prominent parallel veins, 6-12 inches long by 4-6 inches broad, (those of saplings often much larger), petioles 6-12 lines long hirsute, stipules lanceolate hirsute ; male aments slender 3-4 inches long and 8 lines in diameter axillary solitary or in pairs, at first erect at length pendulous on peduncles 4-1 inch long, the florets mixed with numerous linear chaffy bracts; female aments solitary oval or roundish about 1 inch long by 6-8 lines broad on peduncles about 3 inches long, the upper part of the florets nearly solid tapering, armed with stiff bristles and almost consolidated with the style which is much exserted, fruit oval about the size of a lemon armed with numerous hispid spines, seeds numerous oval or ovate the size of a bean, Joxd. Fl. Ind. iii. 521. This very valuable timber tree is most abundant in the moist forests of the Western Ghats of the Bombay and Madras presidencies fron the sea level upto about 4000 feet elevation ; it is well known by the Tamil and Malayalum names of Ayni and Angelli, and in Canarese (Mysore) at is called Hebulsu ; its timber is strong and tolerably close and even grained, of a glossy texture and yellowish brown color, weighs about 48 lbs. when unseasoned and 40 lbs. per cubic foot when seasoned, and has a specific gravity of 604; tt is much in use for ship building, house building, furniture, and various other purposes. Analysis. 1. Portion of a branch with male inflorescence, and shewing one of the pinnatifid leaves which very rarely occur on a flowering branch though abundant on saplings, 2, Portion of a branch with female inflorescence. 3, 4, 5. Male florets. 6. 2 fe Bo S J We © gy) PL: CCCXI, DrerripsPy. beth Ligier ulaarnteaecie oul Weta oud Sulisyos aliisyesn cere an tal 4th ‘ ‘ 1 . ie ‘ ase pent eK Py CAE Shaul ge) Us ik isk isn shrek nats PATCH) SINAC BUROITG it Chive SCH OGRE abon ris Ae r t - NN La es Aisk Vea Narn Dery YR AY as been ay av eG TaronOd SL CRUST SISO aah alk nk) hoe ae AE EES Bit want, needle Foals wait we GIRONNIERA RETICULATA. (Nat. order Urticez.) GIRONNIERA, Goud.—GEN. CHAR. Flowers small discious male and female, no hermathrodite, in axillary cymes or branched racemes, perianth of 4-5 segments imbricatein the bud. Male, stamens 4-5 opposite the perianth-segments with or without an abortive ovary, filaments slightly incurved. Female, no stamens present, ovary with 1 pendulous ovule, style 1, stigmas 2 long and filiform, drupe slightly compressed. Trees or shrubs, eaves alternate, stipules large free convolute covering the terminal buds (as in Ficus) deciduous —Helminthospermum, Thw. Nematostigma, Planchon. GIRONNIERA RETICULATA. (Thw.) A large timber tree, young parts sparingly adpresso-pilose but soon glabrous, leaves very hard coriaceous ovate to oblongo-ovate generally with a long acumination, glabrous in age on both sides and shining above, 3-54 inches long by 14-23 broad, penniveined and prominently reticulated, the 9-14 primary veins on each side much raised and prominent beneath, petioles 2-4 lines long, stipules long linear-lanceolate as in the generic character. Male flowers in panicles axillary or between the leaves, perianth segments 5 rounded obtuse puberulous or subglabrous, abortive ovary generally wauting, Female flowers solitary axillary pedicellate, drupe glabrous ovoid a little compressed attenuated at the apex, 6 lines long by 4 lines broad, crowned with the remains of the stigmas. Thw. Ln, Pl. Zey. p. 268. This valuable timber tree is found on our Ghat forests up to 3000 feet elevotion, from South Canara down to Travancore and Tinnevelly, andit also inhabits Ceylon ; the wood is very hard and heavy, and is a valuable engineering timber. In Tinnevelly the tree is called Koditani. The specimen figured was collected on the Carcoor ghat ( Wynad), wad as 1 could not find the female tree I have added dissections of both female and male from another species, the G. subegualis. Analysis. The plate gives a branch of the male tree in flower. 1, Portion of male inflorescence. 2. A male flower bud. 3. Male flower. 4, A male flower open. 5. Anthers, front and back view. (Drawn from living specimens.) GIRONNIERA SUBZQUALIS. 6. Branch of male tree. 7. Male flower bud. 8. Male flower open. 9. Anther, front view, 10. Anther, back view. 11. Abortive style. 12. Branch of female tree. 13 & 13a. Female flowers. 14 &15. Female flowers cut vertically, shewing the solitary pendulous ovule. 16 &17. Seed. 18. Ovule. (16,17 & 18 copied from Blume’s drawings, the rest from dried specimens, ) jee) — ive) Decrzazotig Lo itd’ uy Ae eae i ‘eche ct AN RA) (OS ES 1s Bi 4 pe + BWM KN: ayaa FICUS RELIGIOSA. (Nat. order Urticez.) Ficus, Linn.—GEN, CHAR, Flowers unisexual, minute, enclosed in a hollow globular ovoid or pear-shaped succulent receptacle called a fig or symecium ; the minute aperture closed by bracts turned inwards. Male flowers usually near the mouth of the fig. Perianth 3 to 6 lobed. Stamens usually | or 2, rarely more. Zemale flowers usually lining the greater part of the cavity. Perianth entire, or of 2 or more lobes or segments. Ovary l-celled, with 1 pendulous or laterally attached ovule. Style usually lateral, with a more or less oblique variously shaped stigma. Fruiting fig usually enlarged, the enclosed seed-like nuts surrounded each by its membranous or pulpy persistent perianth. Embryo curved, in a fleshy albumen. Trees or shrubs, with the juice usually milky. Leaves alternate, or very rarely opposite, entire or divided. Figs (receptacles) solitary, or in clusters of 2 or more, axillary, or on the old wood below the leaves, usually with 3 small bracts at their base, or at the base of the pedicel. Benth, Fl. Hong Kong p. 326. Urostigma, Gasparrini. Ficus RELIGIOSA. (Linn.) A very large tree, root spreading horizontally and near the surface, trunk up to 25 feet in girth, bark pretty smooth ash-colored, branches numerous spreading, leaves (deciduous in the cold season) alternate cordate with a very long cuspidate point 1}-2 inches long, the margins scollop-waved, glabrous on both sides and shining above, 6-7 inches long, 3-34 inches broad, the primary veins very prominent, the veinlets beautifully reticulated, petioles round smooth slender 3-44 inches long, stipules sheathing soon caducous, figs in axillary pairs sessile or shortly pedicellate vertically compressed, smooth, blackish when ripe with 3 bracts at their base.—Urostigma religiosa, Gasp. ;— Wight Ic. t. 1967. This very beautiful tree ts held very sacred by the natives in Inaia and Ceylon ; it is common in our forests and cultivated throughout India, particularly as an avenue tree and as a sacred tree ; it is every where known by tts Hindoostani name Peepul, and is called \Arasi in Tamil, Rai in Telugu, and Bo in Ceylon. The wood, like that of the Banian (F. Indica) and most other species, is white, light and very perishable, rather coarse grauned and brittle anc not durable, and only fit for fuel, and bad even for that. Silk worms are very fond of its leaves. A cubic foot unseasoned weighs 40-42 lbs., and 34 lbs. when seasoned, and its specific gravity is ‘544. Analysis. 2. A male floret removed from the inside of the receptacle or fig. 4, Stamens, front and back view. 5. The young fig. 7. The fig cut open, shewing the mass of minute florets. 8. The fig, back view. 9. Scale or bract. 10,11. Female floret. 12, Ovary cut vertically. 3. Embryo removed from the seed. (Analysis copied from Wight’s drawings.) Ficus TsiAba. 1, Portion of a branch in flower. 2, A receptacle or young fig cut open. 3. alll hale iia Loe tie,» - Jian Ree eee eh eee PL. COCEXVIL RUMAH / iia f easy XK. y, PL COMRies Dumpry Lith TUTI A ng «te