FROM UPPER BURMA AND THE SHAN STATES. 83 
paullo majoribus, corolle tubo longiore staminodiis minus fim- 
briatis. 
Shan hills at 3000 to 4000 feet. 
This and the two species named are very closely allied in floral 
structure, but in foliage this differs from both in the incon- 
spicuous venation, and from the former in being glabrous. 
Bassia longifolia, Linn., var.?; Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. p. 544.— 
Shan hills. 
This differs from typical B. longifolia, which is recorded from 
the Deccan peninsula, Ceylon, and Bengal (Beddoine), in having 
smaller flowers and hairless stamens, but it may be a depau- 
perated condition. There is a specimen in the Kew Herbarium 
of what we take to be the B. longifolia from Singapore. 
Mimusops Elengi, Linn.; Fl. Brit. Ind. iii. p. 548; Forest 
Fl. Burma, ii. p. 123.—Shan hills. 
South India and Malay peninsula. 
EBENACEÆ. 
Diospyros montana, Roxb.; Fl. Brit. Ind. iii. p. 555.—Shan 
hills at 2000 feet. 
Widely spread in India and Malaya, and extending to tropical 
Australia. 
Diospyros, sp. n.? aft. D. sylvatice. Specimen mancum.— 
Shan hills terai at 2000 feet. 
STYRACER. 
Symplocos cratzgoides, Ham.; Fl. Brit. Ind. Ht. p. 5078; 
Forest Fl. Burma, ii. p. 147.—Shan hills at 5000 feet. 
North India, from Kashmir eastward to Japan, and southward 
through Burma to Martaban. 
Symplocos racemosa, Roxb.; Fl. Brit. Ind. iii. p. 576; Forest 
Fl. Burma, ii. p. 144.-—Shan hills at 3000 feet, Aplin and Manders. 
Eastern India, Burma, and South-eastern China. 
Styrax rugosum, Kurz, Forest Fl. Burma, i. p. 141; Fl. 
Brit. Ind. iii. p. 589.—Shan hills at 4000 feet. 
Martaban. 
a2 
