424 CXXXV. EUPHORBIACEZ. (J. D. Hooker.) | Trewia. 
one much more densely cottony than the other. There is also a small leaved 
state. 
j ii ; fl. in short 
2. T. polycarpa, Benth. in Gen. Plant. iii. 319; fem. : 
racemes, fruit ovoid or subglobose } in. diam., pericarp thin. T. nudiflora, 
Wight Ic. t. 1871 (the fem. fl. only); Beddome Fl. Sylvat. t. 281. 
The Concan, Law, Stocks, &c. . 
Leaves subopposite, of the form of T. nudiflora, but faintly puberulous beneath, 
sometimes 8 in. diam.; petiole very slender. Fem. racemes many-fld. . oan it 
celled ; styles 3-3 in. long. Fruiting racemes 2-3 in.; pedicels about j in. 
$ in. diam., densely finely tomentose; pericarp crustaceous, loculicidal. 
THE FOLLOWING SPECIES ARE ALTOGETHER DOUBTFUL. 
T. DISCOLOR, Smith in Rees Cyclop. xxvi.; leaves ovate entire minutely densely 
tomentose, minutely punctate above white beneath, panicles terminal, male lis 
villous, Muell. Arg. in DC. Prodr. xv. ii. 954. — E. Indies ?—Mueller suggests 
being Mallotus Apelta or M. paniculatus. 
T. HERNANDIFOLIA, Roth Nov. Sp. 874, is probably Macaranga indica, Wight. 
T. RUsCIFLORA, Heyne in Roth Nov. Sp. 374. "Thisisundeterminable generically 
by the description. Mueller, Arg. (in DC. Prodr. xv. ii. 954), suggests it being a 
Mallotus. 
52. COCCOCERAS, Miquel. 
Trees. Leaves alternate, entire or toothed, 3-plinerved. Flowers 3 
axillary and terminal racemes, dicecious, apetalous; males clustered, sub- 
sessile; fem. lax, pedicelled. Disk 0. Matz rr. Calyx globose, splitting 
into 3-6 valvate sepals. Stamens 15-20, on a couvex receptacle, filaments 
free; anthers dorsifixed, cells distinct parallel. Pistillode 0. Fem. n 
Sepals 5, lanceolate, imbricate. Ovary 3-celled ; styles spreading, hispi ; 
ovules 1 in each cell. Capsule hard, depressed, the ribbed angles sometime 
horned or produced horizontally, at length loculicidally 3-valved. See 
subglobose or compressed, estrophiolate, testa smooth crustaceous.—Species 
3, Malayan. 
In a Bornean species apparently of this genus (Beccari 2502) the leaves are not 
triple-nerved. 
l. C. muticum, Muell. Arg. in Fora 1864, 470, and in DC. Prodr. 
xv. li. 950; quite glabrous, leaves long-petioled elliptic- or cuneate-oblong 
obtusely acuminate quite entire, nerves 5-7 pairs above the basal, fruiting 
racemes short, fruit shortly pedicelled triquetrous. 
Maracca, Griffith (Kew Distrib, 4770). . land- 
Branches woody. Leaves 5-6 in., pale grey when dry, most minutely g "the 
dotted beneath, base minutely cordate; petiole 2-24 in. Fruiting racemes (in m- 
solitary specimen) 1} in., pedicels i in. Fruit (immature) 1 in. long, lobes 0p a 
pressed, acutely keeled, broader than long; top broadly rounded or truncate wi 
very short style.—Griffith in a note says the sepals are 6 reflexed. 8- 
Var. ? pedicellata ; leaves with 3-4 nerves above the basal, fruiting jupe ost 
12 in., pedicels 1 in.—Malacca, Griffith (Kew Distrib. 4789).— The leaves are à nt 
identieal with those of C. muticum, but the racemes so very different that I exp 
this will prove a distinct species, which may be called C. pedicellatum. It is in very 
young fruit only. 
2. €. plicatum, Muell. Arg. in Flora 1864, 539, and in DC. ren 
XV. 11. 950; shoots racemes and young leaves beneath finely tomen ate, 
leaves shortly petioled elliptic or oblong obtusely acuminate cren?» 
