AURANTIACE. IV. Screrosryzis. V. Cooxra. VI. MURRAYA. VII. Micromerum. VIII. AGLAIA. 
** * Leaves impari-pinnate. 
4 S. pentapuy’iia (Blum. l. c.) unarmed; leaflets 5, rarely 
7, oval-oblong, obtuse; racemes axillary, very short; berry 
globose. h.S. Native of Java. Ovary 3-celled; cells 1-- 
seeded. 
Five-leaved Sclerostylis. Shrub. 
5 S.? MACROPHY'LLA (Blum. 1. c.) unarmed; leaflets usually 
5, rarely twin or ternate, ovate-oblong, obtusely acuminated, 
quite entire; racemes divaricate, axillary, very long, tapering 
to both ends. h. S. Native of Java. Calyx 5-toothed. 
Ovary 3-celled ; cells 1-seeded. Perhaps Glycésmis pentaphylla. 
Long-leaved Sclerostylis. Shrub. 
Cult. Loam and peat will be a good mixture for these shrubs, 
with the addition of a little rotten dung, and ripened cuttings 
will root if planted in a pot of sand placed under a hand-glass, 
in a moist heat. 
V. COO’*KIA (in memory of the celebrated cireumnavigator, 
Captain James Cook, R. N., who was killed in the Sandwich 
Islands in 1779). Sonner. voy. 2. p. 130. t. 181. D.C. prod. 
1. p. 537. 
Lin. syst. Decéndria, Monogynia. Calyx 5-cleft. Petals 
5, navicular, villous. Stamens 10, with free linear filaments and 
roundish anthers. Ovary villous. Fruit baccate, somewhat 
globose, 5-celled, or 1-2-celled from abortion; cells 1-seeded. 
Small trees with impari-pinnate leaves ; leaflets alternate, un- 
equal at the base or oblique. 
1 C. puncra‘ra (Retz. obs. 6. p. 29.) leaflets ovate-lanceolate, 
acuminated, hardly unequal at the base. hk. G. Native of 
China and the Moluccas. Jacq. schoenbr. 1. t. 101. Lam. 
ill. t. 354, Quinaria Lansium, Lour. coch. 272.—Rumph. amb. 
l. t. 55. A middle-sized tree bearing eatable fruit about 
the size of a pigeon’s egg, yellow on the outside; pulp white, 
rather acrid but sweet. Flowers small, white, disposed in race- 
mose panicles. There are 2 other figures of Zansiums in Rumph. 
amb. which are probably varieties of this plant or perhaps dis- 
tinct species. The fruit is sold in the markets at Canton. 
Dotted Wampee-tree. Clt. 1795. Tree 20 feet. 
2 C. rarca' ra (D. C. prod. 1. p. 537.) petals with 4 furrows 
on the inside; leaflets lanceolate, faleate. h.G. Native of 
Cochin-china. Aulacea falcata, Lour. cochin. 273. Branches 
spreading. Flowers small, white, in terminal racemes. 
Sickle-leaved Wampee-tree. Shrub 8 feet. 
3 C.cyanoca’rea (Blum. ex Schlecht. Linnea. 1. p. 665.) 
leaflets oblong, acuminated at both ends, bluntish; corymbs 
solitary, axillary, and terminal. h.S. Nativeof Java. Gly- 
cosmis cyanocarpa, Spreng. syst. app. p. 161. Leaflets 5-7, 
alternate. Calyx 5-leaved. Petals 5, oval, concave, connivent. 
Stamens 10, awl-shaped, free, equal, compressed. Anthers cor- 
date. Ovary girded by a tumid disk, 5-celled ; cells 1-seeded. 
Stigma obtuse, sessile. Berry oval, dry, 1-seeded. Cotyledons 
obvolute. 
Blue-fruited Wampee-tree. Tree 20 feet. 
4 C. cHrorospe’rma (Blum. l.c. p. 664.) leaflets oblong-lan- 
ceolate, obtusely acuminated ; racemes compound, terminal, and 
axillary. h. S. Native of Java. Glycésmis chlorospérma, 
Spreng. Leaflets 5-7, alternate. Calyx 5-leaved. Petals 
elliptic. Stamens for the most part 9, free, awl-shaped, com- 
pressed, unequal. Anthers cordate. Ovary tumid at the base, 
5-celled ; cells 1-seeded. Style almost wanting, crowned by an 
obtuse stigma. Berry coriaceous, globose, 1-celled, 1-3-séeded. 
Cotyledons usually lobed. Perhaps a genus allied to Glycésmis. 
Green-seeded Wampee-tree. Shrub 6 feet. , 
Cult. The species of Codkia thrive very well in a mixture of 
loam and peat; ripened cuttings, not deprived of any of their 
VOL. I.— PART VII. 
585 
leaves, will root in a pot of sand plunged under a hand-glass, in 
a moist heat. 
VI. MURRA‘YA (in honour of John Andrew Murray, a 
Swedish botanist, once Professor of Medicine and Botany in 
the university of Gottingen, a pupil of Linnzus, and editor of 
some of his works, especially an edition of his Systema). Keen. 
in Schreb. gen. no. 717. D.C. prod. 1. p. 536.—Marsana, 
Sonn. voy. ind. 3. t. 139. 
Lin. syst. Decéndria, Monogynia. Calyx 5-parted. Co- 
rolla campanulate, 5-petalled. Stamens 10, with linear-awl- 
shaped filaments, and roundish anthers. Fruit baccate, fleshy, 
2-celled, but usually 1-celled from abortion; cells 1-seeded. 
Seed pendulous, with a thick woolly covering. Auricles of 
cotyledons small (Mirb.). Trees with impari-pinnate leaves, 
and white, sweet-scented flowers. Fruit eatable. 
1 M. exo’ttca (Lin. mant. 563.) leaflets 7-9. obovate, obtuse ; 
peduncles many-flowered, corymbose ; berries roundish, usually 
l-seeded. k.S. Native of the East Indies. Ker. bot. reg. 
434,—Murr. comm. goett. 9. p. 186. t. 1. Lam. ill. t. 352. 
Chalcas Japonénsis, Lour. coch. 271. Marsàna buxifdlia, Sonn. 
itin. ind. t. 129.—Rumph. amb. 5. p. 29. t. 18. f. 2. Fruit red. 
Flowers white, sweet-scented. 
Exotic Murraya. Fl. Aug. Sep. Clt. 1771. Shrub 10 ft. 
2 M. panicuta‘ra (Jack. mal. misc. 1. no. 2. p. 31.) leaflets 
ovate, acuminated ; flowers terminal and axillary, usually pani- 
cled ; berries oblong, usually 2-seeded. h. S. Native of the 
East Indies. Hook, exot. fl. t. 79. Chàlcas paniculata, Lour. 
cochin. 270.—Rumph. amb, 5. p. 26. t. 17. Flowers white, 
with the scent of jasmine. Fruit about the size of a small 
Capsicum, red, with a strong scent like the gooseberry. 
Panicled Murraya. Fl. July. Clt. 1823. Tree 20 feet: 
3 M. tonerrouia (Blum. bijdr. ex Schlecht. Linnza. 1. p. 
665.) leaflets 3-5, oblong, acute at the base; racemes terminal. 
h.S. Native of Java. Petals 5, linear, spreading. Anthers 
ovate. Ovary tumid at the base, 3-celled; cells 3-seeded. 
Stigma obtuse, sessile. 
Long-leaved Murraya. Shrub 10 feet. 
Cult.: These shrubs will thrive well in a mixture of turfy 
loam and peat, and ripened cuttings, not deprived of any of 
their leaves, will root in sand under a hand-glass, in a moist heat. 
VII. MICROME'LUM (from puxpoc, micros, small, and 
pndov, melon, apple; fruit small), Blum. bijdr. ex Schlecht. 
Linnea. 1. p. 665. 
Lin. syst. Decdndria, Monogynia. Calyx urceolate, entire, 
permanent. Petals 5, linear, spreading. Stamens 10, free ; 
filaments awl-shaped, alternate ones shortest; anthers roundish, 
didymous. Ovary 5-celled; cells 2-seeded. Style thick, 
crowned by an obtuse stigma. Berry dry, with 5 papery, twisted 
dissepiments inside, lamellate, 1-2-seeded. Cotyledons leafy, 
twisted. This genus is nearly allied to Murrdya and Coókia. 
A tree with impari-pinnate leaves and alternate oblique leaflets, 
and terminal corymbs of flowers. ` 
1 M. puse'scens (Blum. l. c.) leaflets 7-9, ovate, obtusely 
acuminated, puberulous beneath as well as the branches and 
corymbs. h.S. Native of Java. 
Pubescent Micromelum. Tree 20 feet. 
Cult. To be cultivated and propagated in the same manner 
as that recommended for Murraya. 
VIII. AGLATA (from ayňaıa, aglaia, one of the Graces, 
which expresses beauty; given to this genus, which is remark- 
able for its beauty and the sweet scent of the flowers). Lour. 
coch. p.216. D.C. prod. 1. p. 537. 
Lin. syst. Monadélphia, Penténdria. Calyx 5-parted. 
4 F 
