RUTACEAE. — EVODIA 133 



Sect. 2, OxTACTis Rehder & Wilson. 



Zanthoxylum, sect, Oxyactis Bennett in Ann. Nat. Hist. ser. 3, X. 201 (1862). 

 EvodiUy sect. Evodioceras Dode in Bull. Soc. Bot. France, LV. 706 (1908). 



Evodia hupehensis Dode in Bull Soc, BoL France, LV. 707 (1908). 



Evodia Daniellii Pritzel in Bot. Jakrb. XXIX. 423 (pro parte, non Hemsley) 

 (1900). — Pampanini in Nuov. Giorn. Bot Ital. n. ser. XVIII. 125 (1911). 



Western Hupeh: Hsing-shan Hsien, woodlands, alt. 1000-1500 

 m., July, August and September 1907 (No. 387% $ and fruit, 3574, S; 

 tree 6-12 m. tall, girth 0.3-1 m., flowers white) ; Changlo Hsien, woods, 

 alt. 1000-1500 m., June and July 1907 (Nos. 387*>, <?, 3576, in part, $] 

 tree 6-18 m. tall); Patung Hsien, moist woods, alt. 1000-1300 m., 

 July 1907 (No. 3576, in part, $ ; tree 6-13 m. tall); Fang Hsien, woods, 

 alt. 1000-1600 m., July 1907 (No. 3576, in part, $ ; tree 6-12 m. tall, 

 flowers white); Changyang Hsien, margins of woods, alt. 1300 m., 

 June 1907 (No. 3575; tree 20 m. tall, girth 2 m., bark smooth, gray); 

 same locality, July 1901 (Veitch Exped. No. 2693, J); Paokang Hsien, 

 woodlands, October 1901 (No. 2693% fruit); without locality, June 

 1901 (Veitch Exped. No. 2415, $); without locality, A. Henry (No. 

 4482, fruit). Szech'uan: Nan-ch'uan, A, von Rosthorn (No. 1884). 

 Shensi: without locality, 1897, G. Giraldi; " Kusan," Hugh Scallan 

 (No. 75). " Mt. Miao-uan-san/' 1899, Hugh Scallan. 



Tins is a very common tree in the woodlands of western Hupeh where it grows 

 to a larger size than any other species. Like its allies it has smooth gray bark, 

 spreading branches and brittle wood, and is known colloquially as the Ch'ou-la- 

 shu (Stinking Ash tree). It is also called P'ao-la-tzu, a name signifying that its 

 fruit is worthless as a drug in contradistinction to that of E. officinalis Dode. 



Dode describes the leaves as " subtus albido-glauca," but on our specimens they 

 are merely pale green or paUid on the under surface. Otherwise our material agrees 

 fairly with the short description. The leaflets are sometimes narrowed at the base 

 and have usually spreading hairs on the underside of the midrib and secondary 

 veins. The large flat or sUghtly rounded corymbs, the smaller flowers and the 

 axillary tufts of hair between the veins on the underside of the leaflets readily 

 distinguish this species from the closely allied E, Henryi Dode. 



A picture of this tree will be found under No. 583 of the collection of Wilson's 

 photographs and also in his Vegetation of Western China, No. 216. 



Evodia Henryi Dode in Bull Soc. Bot France, LV. 706 (1908). 



Evodia Daniellii Pritzel in Bot. Jahrb. XXIX. 423 (pro parte, non Hemsley) 

 (1900). 



Western Hupeh: Fang Hsien, woods, alt. 1300-2000 m., June 

 and September 1907 (No. 324, 9, fruit; small tree 5-6 m. tall, flowers 



i 



