FROM UPPER BURMA AND THE SHAN STATES. 61 
SAMYDACEZ. 
Casearia graveolens, Dalzell; Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. p. 592.—Shau 
hills at 5000 feet. 
Gurhwal and Kumaon southward in the Deccan peninsula and 
eastward to Burma. 
CUCURBITACE®. 
Trichosanthes paimata, Roxb.?; Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. p. 606.— 
Shan hills at 4000 feet. 
North India to Ceylon, Singapore, and the Malay archipelago. 
Trichosanthes, sp. ; foliis insigniter discoideo-tubereulatis alte 
palmato-lobatis, lobis obovato-oblongis fere truncatis pauciden- 
tatis.—Shan hills at 4000 feet. 
Probably an undescribed species, but there are only quite young 
flower-buds. 
Thladiantha calcarata, Clarke; syn. T. dubia, auctor. nonnul. 
non Bunge; DC. Monogr. Phanerog. iii. p. 423.—Shan hills terai 
at 3000 feet. 
Eastern India to Pegu. 
Zehneria umbellata, Thwaites; Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. p. 625.— 
Shan hills at 4000 to 5000 feet. 
Throughout India and Malaya and reaching South China and 
North Australia. 
FICOIDE Æ. 
Mollugo hirta, Thunb.; Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. p. 662.—Meiktila. 
Generally dispersed in warm countries. 
UMBELLIFERÆ. 
Hydrocotyle asiatica, Linn.; Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. p. 669.—Shan 
hills terai at 2000 feet. 
Almost cosmopolitan in the tropics and extending to some 
temperate regions, including Japan, the Bermudas, and Tasmania. 
Hydrocotyle javanica, Thunb. ; Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. p. 667.—Shan 
hills, 2000 to 5000 feet. 
Tropical Asia to Southern China and Southern Japan; also in 
Eastern Africa and Australia. 
