RUTACEAE. — TODDALIA 137 



This species resembles P. japonicum Maximowicz in the pale pubescence which 

 covers the lower surface of the leaflets, but is distinguishable from it by its larger 

 fruit on shorter and much stouter pedicels in narrow very compact panicles. The 

 type is Wilson's No. 1972 of the Veitch Expedition which I have not seen. 



Phellodendron chinense, var. glabriusculum Schneider, IlL Handb. 

 Laubhokk. IL 126 (1907). 



Phellodendron sinense Dode in Bull. Soc. BoL France^ IN. 649 (1908). 



Western Hupeh: Hsing-shan Hsien, woodlands, alt. 1000-1700 

 m., July 1897 (No. 3227 S, tree 3-10 m. tall, 3 dm-1 m. diam.); 

 Changyang Hsien, woodlands, alt. 1300-1700 m., July 1907 (Nos. 

 3566, 3567 i) tree 10 m. tall, 1.3 m. diam.); without precise locality, 

 A, Henry (No. 4603 ?, in Herb. Gray). Western Szech'uan: 

 Wa-shan, alt. 1700 m. (No. 3228, <?; tree 8 m. tall, 6 dm. diam.). 



This variety of which Wilson collected only specimens of the staminate tree, 

 IS distinguished by the less pubescent under surface of the leaflets which are often 

 nearly glabrous except along the midribs and veins. 



The bark of P. chinense is used by the Chinese in medicine under the name of 

 huang-peh. A picture of a tree of the variety glabriusculum (No. 3228) will be 

 found under No. 350 of Wilson's collection of photographs and also in his Vegeta- 

 tion of Western China, No. 333. 



A Phellodendron raised in Veitch's Nursery as Evodia sp. from seeds collected 

 by Wilson (No. 876, Veitch Exped.) at Changyang Hsien in western Hupeh, at 

 altitudes between 1500 and 2300 metres, and now growing in the Arnold Arbore- 

 tum, is probably an undescribed species, although the cultivated tree has not 

 yet flowered. I have not seen a Chinese specimen. The young branches are light 

 orange-brown and lustrous; the leaves are 9-11-foliolate, without hairs on the 

 margins, and are villose below along the midribs and veins with rather long white 

 nairs, the unusually slender veins being largely within the parenchyma. 



TODDALIA Juss. 

 ToddaHa asiatica Lamarck, Tab. EncycL Meth. IL 116 (1793). 



Paullinia asiatica Linnaeus, Spec. 365 (1753). — Osbeck, Dagbok Ostind, 

 i?esa 248 (1757); Reise Osiind. 323 (1765); Voy. China East Ind. II. 9 (1771), 



Toddalia nitida Lamarck, Tab. Encycl. Meth. IL IIG, t. 139, fig. 1 (1793). 



Toddalia aculeata Persoon, Syn, PI. I. 249 (1805). — Bentham, Fl Hongk. 

 59 (1861). — Hemsley in Jour. Linn. Soc. XXIII. 108 (1886). — Franchet, 

 PI. Delavay. 125 (1889). — Pritzel in Bot. Jahrb. XXIX. 424 (1900).— 

 Dunn & Tutcher in Kew Bull. Misc. Inform, add. ser. X. 56 {Fl. Kwang- 

 tung <fc Hongkong) (1912). 



Zanthoxylum nitidum AVallich, Cat. No. 1207 e China (nomen nudum) (non 

 DeCandoUe) (1828). 



Toddalia flonhunda Wallich, PL As. Ear. III. 17 (1832). 



Xanthoxylon florihundum Wallich, PL As. Rar. III. t. 232 (1832). 



