60 GENERAL COLLETT AND MR. W. B. HEMSLEY ON PLANTS 
Lagerstremia tomentosa, Presl; Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. p. 578; 
Forest Fl. Burma, i. p. 522.—Shan hills at 3000 feet. 
Pegu and Martaban. 
Lagerstremia ($ Pterocalymma) sp. aff. L. piriformi, Koehne. 
—Near Yindaw, in the plains of Upper Burma. 
This is very closely allied to the Philippine-island species L. piri- 
formis, Koehne, but the specimen is in very young bud only. 
Woodfordia floribunda, Sulisb.; Fl. Brit. Ind. i. p. 572; Forest 
Fl. Burma, i. p. 518, sub nomine W. fruticosa, Kwrz.—Shan hills 
at 4000 feet. 
Baluehistan to China, and in tropical Afriea and Madagascar. 
Ammannia baccifera, Linn.; Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. p. 569.—Shan 
hills at 4000 feet. 
Tropical Asia, Africa, and Australia, and extending into some 
subtropieal and temperate regions, as Afghanistan, China, and 
Japan. 
Ammannia peploides, Spreng. ; Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. p. 566.—Shan 
hills at Meiktila. 
Persia eastward to Japan and southward in the Malay penin- 
sula and archipelago. 
Ammannia rotundifolia, Ham.; Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. p. 566.— 
Shan hills at 5000 feet. 
Very widely spread in tropical and subtropical Asia and 
extending to Japan. 
ONAGRACEZÆ. 
Epilobium pannosum, Haussk. (syn. E. khasianum, Clarke; 
Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. p. 585), var. ? glabrescens.—Shan hills at 4000 
feet. 
Khasia mountains. 
The Shan specimen is almost glabrous and the leaves thick and 
hard ; but there is no other obvious difference. 
Jussiæa repens, Linn.; Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. p. 587.—Meiktila. 
Almost cosmopolitan in warm regions. 
