FROM UPPER BURMA AND THE SHAN SLATES. 81 
Vaccinium exaristatum, Kurz, Forest Fl. Burma, ii. p. 91.— 
Shan hills at 4000 to 6000 feet. 
Martaban. 
PLUMBAGINEX. 
Ceratostigma plumbaginoides, Bunge; Journ. Linn. Soc. xxvi. 
p. 36.—Shan hills at 5000 to 6000 feet. 
Eastward to Eastern China, northward to Peking. 
Not previously recorded west of China, and rare in the Shan 
hills, where it was only observed at Toongyi, near Fort Stedman. 
PRIMULACEE. 
Primula Forbesii, Franchet; Journ. Linn. Soc. xxvi. p. 38.— 
Shan hills at 3000 to 3500 feet. 
Yunnan. 
This belongs to Franchet’s new section Monocarpice of 
Primula, which furnishes a connecting-link between this genus 
and Androsace. It is very common in damp shady localities all 
over the Shan States. 
Primula denticulata, Smith; Fl. Brit. Ind. iii. p. 485.—Shan 
hills plateau at 5000 feet. 
Afghanistan to Western China. 
Lysimachia lobelioides, Wall.; Fl. Brit. Ind. iii. p. 502.—Shan 
hills at 5000 feet. 
North India, from Kashmir eastward, and in Java. 
Lysimachia chenopodioides, Watt; Fl. Brit. Ind. iii. p.503.— 
Shan hills terai at 2000 feet. 
Kashmir to Bhotan, though not hitherto found in Sikkim. 
MYRSINER. 
Masa ramentacea, A. DC.; Fl. Brit. Ind. iii. p. 508; Forest 
Fl. Burma, ii. p. 99.—Shan hills terai at 3000 feet; also col- 
lected by Mr. Aplin. 
Eastern India and Malaya. 
LINN. JOURN.—BOTANY, VOL. XXVIII. G 
