290 WILSON EXPEDITION TO CHINA 
D. Macgregor; without date, W. M. Cooper; Hang-chau, F. N. Meyer 
(No. 440); Kiangsu: Chinkiang, W. R. Carles (No. 439). 
Styrax calvescens Perkins in Engler, Pflanzenr. IV. -241, 32 (1907). 
Kiangsi: Kuling, thickets, common, alt. 1300 m., August 1, 1907 
(No. 1733). Hupeh: A. Henry (No. 721 ex Perkins). 
I refer not without hesitation Wilson's No. 1733, which has only young fruit, to 
this species of which I have not seen the type. It differs from the description in its 
denser tomentum, even the mature leaves being densely grayish or whitish tomen- 
tose beneath; otherwise the specimen resembles closely S. philadelphoides Perkins, 
to which it seems to bear the same relation that S. dasyanthus, var. cinerascens 
Rehder bears to typical S. dasyanthus Perkins. 
Styrax suberifolius Hooker & Arnott, Bot. Voy. Beechey, 196, t. 40 
(1841). — De Candolle, Prodr. VIII. 261 (1844). — Bentham in 
Hooker Jour. Bot. & Kew Gard. Misc. IV. 304 (1852); Fl. Hongkong, 
213 (1861). — Hemsley in Jour. Linn. Soc. XXVI. 77 (1889). — Per- 
kins in Engler, Pflanzenr. IV.-241, 60 (1907). 
Cyrta suberifolia Miers in Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 3, III. 279 (1859); Con- 
trib. Bot. I. 182, t. 29 (1851-61). 
Styraz caloneurus Perkins in Bot. Jahrb. XXXI. 484 (1902). 
aon suberifolius, var. caloneurus Perkins in Engler, Pflanzenr. IV.-241, 61. 
Western Hupeh: Changyang Hsien, side of streams, alt. 1000 m., 
June 1907 (No. 2570, in part; thin tree 6-10 m. high, girth 30-45 cm., 
flowers white); Patung Hsien, thickets, rare, alt. 800 m., May 1907 
(No. 2570, in part; thin tree, 7 m. high, girth 30 cm.); without precise 
locality, June 1900 (Veitch Exped. No. 1202); A. Henry (No. 7704). 
Yunnan: Szemao, alt. 1500-1700 m., A. Henry (Nos. 11885, 11885a, 
11885b). Kwang-tung: Hongkong, C. Ford; Hongkong, Nov. 4, 
1903, C. S. Sargent. Fokien; Aprilto June 1905, S. T. Dunn (Herb. 
Hongkong Bot. Gard. No. 2896). Formosa: Tamsui, 1864, R. 
Oldham (No. 293); South Cape, A. Henry (Nos. 536, 592, 1369). 
With the material before me I am not able to separate the form of western China 
from that of the southeastern provinces; the inflorescence is panicled in both 
forms, though the plate accompanying the original description shows a few-flowered 
inflorescence. The western specimens, however, have generally somewhat narrower 
leaves more cuneate at the base. 
Styrax Veitchiorum Hemsley & Wilson in Kew Bull. Misc. Inform. 
1906, 161. — Perkins in Engler, Pflanzenr. IV.-241, 69 (1907). 
Western Hupeh; Fang Hsien, side of streams, rare, alt. 1000 m., 
May 19 and September 1907 (No. 308; tree 4-12 m. high, girth 0.30-1 
m., flowers white); same locality, June 1901 (Veitch Exped. No. 2015, 
