W' 



Terminalia.'] Uiti. combeetacej:. (C. B. Clarke.) W 



. \' 



usually with two glands at Its apex. Spikes dense, bracteoles and young ovaries 

 villose. Epigynous disc \rith rery little or no hair. Fruits l^^ in. long, exceedingly 

 numerous, minutely villous, broad wings each \ in. wide puberulous, the third acute 

 nardly winged.— The top of the tree in flower appears pink, the middle white, from 

 the panicles changing colour. 



^\ 



.. bECT. IV. Fruit large, 1-1 J in., with two very broad wings, (Eeally allied 

 to Sect. Catappa). 



-. T. Dialata, Kurz For. FL Brit. Burina i, 456; leaves clustered 

 near the ends of the branches obovate narrowed into a very long petiole, spikes- 

 axillary simple elongate, fruit 2-3^ in. wide rusty tomentose. Pentaptera 

 bialata, Roxb. Hort. Bmg. 34 ; Fl Ind. ii. 441 ; WaU. Cat. 3986. 



Burma and the Andamans; Maclelland, Kurz. ,, 



i. Attains 80-100 ft. Leaves 5 in,, glabrous when adult; petiole 2^-3^ in. Spikes 

 ^ery long, the upper flowers male, the lower hermaphrodite. Young ovar^/ and calyx 

 brown-pubescent or tomentose. Ca?y.r-teeth hairy within. Fruit 1J-1| in. long. 



V AB. cuneifolia, Wall. Cat. 3972 ; leaves lanceolate rather than obovate, fruit 

 less than 1 in. long and nearly glabrous.^ — Prome ; Wallich. Tenasserim and Anda- 

 i^ns; Heifer No. 2182 Kew Distrib. 



DOUBTFTTL SPECIES. 



T. MOLUCCAKA 



f/pff ra, and a detached fruit which also resembles that of T. proccra. Eut the petioles 

 ^ave a thickening simulating an articulation, and M. Planchon has suggested (by a 

 '^^ m°^ the specimen) that the leaves are those of an El^ocarpns. 



T. ANGtrsTiFOLiA, Roxb, Hort. Beng. 33 and Fl. Ind. ii. 437 ; a large tree, tender 

 P^rts hairy, leaves narrow-lanceolate acuminate glandular on the margin at the base, 

 ^it scarcely distinguishable from that of T. Chebula, young leaves with much ferru- 

 |iious hair. T. travancorensis, W. ^ 4. Vrodr. 314. Tinnevelly and Travancore, 



oxburgh, — No example known and not seen by anyone except Eoxburgh ; if it be 

 ^9t a variety merely of T. Chebida, 



, 1 ^^^G^ENsis, Roxb, in DC. Prodr, iii. 12; leaves alternate obovate obtuse entire 

 gabrous on both surfaces and the petioles without glands. In Bengal.— This species 

 ? Dot known by any authentic specimen and is insuflSciently described : it is 

 "^probable that it is distinct from all the other known species. 



2. CAXiirCOPTEBZS, Lamh. 



^ A. diffuse shrub with drooping branches. Leaves opposite, shortly petioled, 

 !^P^ or ovate, acuminate, entire. Racemes dense, axillary, and crowded 

 ^^ards the ends of the branches so as to form large panicles. Flowers small, 

 Peenish, each with a lanceolate bract. Calyx-tnhQ 6-striate, produced above 



^^ ovarv. i;r.,v R cj • x._x -_j 1, „„i«^^../i ;« 4v.,u r^/nJa n s:fn~ 



^ens 



auK 1 ^ ^^ ^^^ ^^^®r down on the calyx-tube. Ovanj 1-celled, inferior ; stjle 

 oS^^^' simple; ovules 3, pendulous from the top of the cell. Fi^it narrow 

 m, 5"ribbed, villous, 1-seeded, surmounted by the enlarged calyx. Cotyle- 

 "^^ convolute. 



k ^OA ■ *<*rtbunda, Ldmh. Did. Supp. ii. 41 and HI. t. 367 ; Brand. For. 

 K i ^' ^^tans, Kurz For. Fl. Brit. Burma i. 468. Getonia floribunda, 

 15 n^r- ^^' *• 87 andFL Ind. ii. 428; Roth Nov. Sp. 216; DC. Prodr. iii. 

 llP^l^^Gibs. £onib. Fl. 91; Ma. Fl. hid. Bat. i. pt: i. 606; IT. 4" A: 

 ^^r, 315 ; JfTall. Cat. 4013. G. nutans, Roxb. Hart. Beng. 33 and Fl. Ind. 





