Juglandee.] CXXXVII. JUGLANDE®. (J. D. Hooker.) 595 
Fem. fl. numerous spicate; bracts produced in fruit into long 
veined wings. Nut small coriaceous, imbedded in the base 
ofthe membranous bract . . . 575 5252. 2. ENGELHARDTIA. 
1. JUGLANS, Linn. 
Male fl. from the scars of last year’s leaves; stamens 10-40. Fem. fl. 
one or few at the ends of the branches; petals 4, minute. Fruit as above. 
—Species 3 or 4, Asiatic and N. American. 
J. regia, Linn. Sp. Pl. 997; leaflets 5-6 pairs ovate-oblong or -lan- 
ceolate entire or subserrate. Roxb. Fl. Ind. iii. 691; Brand. For. Fl. 497; 
Gamble Man. Ind. Timb. 392; Kurz For. Fl. ii. 491; Boiss. Fl. Orient. 
1v. 1160. J. re la, var. Kumaonica, Cas. DC. in!Amn. Sc. Nat. Ser. 4, 
“wil. 33; DC. Prodr. xvi ii. 136. ?J. arguta, Wall. Cat. 4944. 
TEMPERATE HIMALAYA and WESTERN TIBET, alt. 3-10,000 ft., from Kashmir 
and Nubra eastwards; wild and cultivated. KmHasrA HILLS (cultivated). Ava 
Hits, Wallich.—Disrrtp. Beluchistan, N. Persia, the Caucasus, Armenia. 
large deciduous tree, attaining 100 ft. with a trunk 20 ft. in girth ; shoots 
mentose. Leaves 6-12 in., young tomentose; leaflets subsessile, 3-8 in., glabrous 
or with the 15-20 pairs of nerves beneath pubescent, terminal petiolulate. Male 
pikes 2-5 in. ; bracts stipitate, lobed. Fem. jl. 1-3; petals linear-lanceolate, green. 
rut ellipsoid green, smooth or pubescent. Nut thick-shelled in the wild form, 
bis greatly thickened margins of the valves.—Kurz ‘mentions a species with small 
“most globose smooth nuts as inhabiting the Shan States of Burma.—The Walnut. 
2. ENGELHARDTIA, Leschen. 
Trees or shrubs. Leaves pinnate entire or serrate glandular or not 
neath. Male fl. in slender simple or branched erect or pendulous lateral 
Spikes. Perianth (or bract) of simple lobed or laciniate usually very 
grequal scales, sometimes arranged so as to resemble a 4-sepaled calyx. 
$ ^62$ 4-12, subsessile on the scales. Fem. spikes long, pendulous; 
Owers Solitary, sessile on a 3-4-lobed bract ; calyx adnate to the ovary, 
8 Obed or toothed ; stigmas 2, short sessile or long laciniate. Fruit a 
mall globose nut adnate to the greatly enlarged scarious 3-lobed reticu- 
cal J nerved bract, of which the midlobe is much the longest; epicarp or 
or yx-tube thin, glandular or hirsute; endocarp 2-valved.— Species 4 or 5, 
ewer, Chinese, Indian, and Malayan. 
l E. Spicata, Blume Bijd. 528; Fl. Jav. Jugland. 8, t. 1 and 5 A; 
rafts 9-10 in, petiolulate linear-oblong entire or subentire, petiole and 
Dc "beneath pubescent, at length glabrate, nut hispidl hirsute. » as. 
393. Tod, xvi, ii, 140; Kurz For. Fl. ii. 491; Gamble Man. I» . Timb. 
Rar Miq. Fl. Ind. Bat. i. i. 842. E. Roxburghiana, Lindl. in Wa TET 
Jugl, n. 87, t. 199 (excl. anal.); Brand. For. Fl. 500; Wall. Cat. a " 
ii, 169." Pterococca, Roxb. Fl. Ind. iii, 631 (in part).—Rumph. Herb. Amb. 
ScBrRoproar, HIMALAYA j ds to Bhotan, ascending 
; from Nepal, Wallich, eastwar 
Mi D AM, MuNNIPORE, and the KHASIA Mrs., and southward to Tenas- 
ae TRIB. Java, Cochin China. u 
petio] ule? Subdeciduous tree, vette in Java, petioles young leaflets midrib and 
leaflets °S more or Jess tomentose, glabrous in age. Leaves 6-12 in., petiole terete ; 
other membranous except when old, obtuse or acute, base very unequal; 
2 pairs ; petiole }+1 in. Spikes 6-12 in., very slender, flexuous, pendu- 
