74 GENERAL COLLETT AND MR. W. B. HEMSLEY ON PLANTS 
Blainvillea latifolia, DC.; Fl. Brit. Ind. iii. p. 305.—Shan 
hills. 
Dispersed throughout the tropics. 
Wedelia calendulacea, Less. ; Fl. Brit. Ind. iii. p. 306.—Shan 
hills at 3000 feet. 
India, Malaya, China, and Japan. 
Spilanthes Acmella, Zinn.: FT. Brit. Ind. ii. p. 807; Kurz 
in Journ. As. Soc. Beng. xlvi. (1877), 2, p. 176.—Upper 
Burma. 
A variable plant, widely spread in warm countries. 
Bidens pilosa, Linn., var.; Fl. Brit. Ind. iii. p. 309.—Shan 
hills, 4000 fect. 
Warm regions throughout the world. 
Myriogyne minuta, Less.; syn. Centipeda orbicularis, Lour. ; 
Fl. Brit. Ind. iii. p. 317.—Shan hills terai at 2000 feet. 
Afghanistan to Ceylon, China, Australia, and Polynesia. 
Gynura Pseudo-China, DC.; Fi. Brit. Ind. iii. p. 384.—Shan 
hills at 4000 feet. 
India and Malaya. 
Emilia sonchifolia, DC.; Fl. Brit. Ind. iii. p. 336.—Shan 
hills at 4000 feet. 
Tropical and subtropical Asia and Africa, and colonized in 
America. 
Notonia crassissima, DC.; Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. p. 338; Kurz in 
Journ. As. Soc. Beng. xlvi. 2, p. 194.—Meiktila. 
Segain hills, Ava. 
This has larger flower-heads than N. grandiflora, DC., more 
numerous involucral bracts with comose tips, and larger, pale, 
more strongly ribbed achenes. Griffith’s figure (Ic. Pl. Asiat. 
t. 470) may, or may not, represent this plant. 
A shrub with remarkably thick fleshy stems and branches. 
When not in flower it has the appearance and habit of one of 
the arboreous Euphorbia, such as E. neriifolia, Linn., which 
is common in the same localities. 
