60 SIR DIETRICH BRANDIS—AN ENUMERATION 
Moist forests in the Southern portion of the Eastern Penin- 
sula, from Pegu and Tenasserim to Cambodia and Cochinchina. 
Also in the Andamans. Not known with certainty north of 
24° N. lat. Roxburgh, Fl. Ind. ii. 609, gives as its native place 
the mountains to the eastward of Bengal. Kurz, F. Flora B. 
Burma, i. 121, gives Chittagong. I have seen no specimens from 
sofar north. Hopea eglandulosa, Roxb. 1. e. 611, from the hills of 
Tipperah, is, according to Kurz, not a Hopea but a Cyclostemon. 
Borneo. Probably not in the Malay Peninsula. Evergreen, not 
gregarious, but scattered in the mixed forest. 
Branches of inflorescence and calyx grey-tomentose. The two 
outer calyx-segments very slightly larger than the others. 
Petals pubescent outside, erose, ciliate at margins. Anthers 
oblong. Ovary gradually narrowed into a conical stylopodium 
and long cylindrical style. Ovary and stylopodium puberulous. 
Both cotyledons bifid to base, the outer concave, larger, em- 
bracing the inner, between the lobes of which the lignified 
placenta with the remains of the dissepiments intrudes, having 
at the apex the 5 abortive ovules. Hypocotyl with 2 hairy lines 
down to the tip, which is glabrous, brown, shining, together 
with the 2 short petioles nearly as long as seed, lying between 
the lobes of the outer cotyledon. Glands in the axils of the 
leaves (domatia) common; their absence, however, does not 
justify the establishment of variety eglandulosa, Pierre. S. vasta, 
WalL, with larger panicles, nearly as long as leaf, and larger 
segments of fruiting-calyx, may be accepted as a variety. H. 
flavescens, found in Cambodia by Dr. Harmand, and described 
by Pierre as a variety of H. odorata—with large compound, 
densely tomentose panicles, the branches of which sometimes 
stand in the axils of large lanceolate bracts—may possibly, when 
the fruit is known, turn out to be a distinct species. 
Herbarium specimens of H. odorata and H. parviflora are 
exceedingly alike, but calyx, petals, anthers, and stylopodium 
different. There is a remarkable analogy with Dipterocarpus 
turbinatus and indicus. Two species which inhabit the moister 
regions of the Western Peninsula are closely allied to two species 
of the Eastern Peninsula of India. 
9. H. MULTIFLORA, Brandis.——Doona multiflora, Burck in 
Ann. Jard. Buitenz. vi. (1887) 234. 
Sumatra; Penang, Government Hill (Curtis). 
Leaves glabrous, coriaceous, ovate-lanceolate, with long obtuse 
