178 WILSON EXPEDITION TO CHINA 



■ 



but occasionally specimens from 20-25 m. tall are met with. The bark is gray, 

 fissured and rather rough and the tree contains little or no poisonous sap. The 

 branches are moderately thick and form an oval or rounded head. Colloquially 

 this Sumach is known as the " Ching-fu-yang," while the galls which are often 

 produced on the leaf are called " Ch'i-pei-tzu " and are used as a medicine. A 

 picture of this tree will be found under No. 346 of the collection of Wilson's 

 photographs and also in his Vegetation of Western China^ No. 448. 



The Sumach in cultivation as R. sinica is this species. On young plants the 

 leaflets are deeply toothed but on adult trees they are quite entire. 



Rhus javanica Linnaeus, Spec. 265 (1753); ed. 2, 380 (1762). 

 Osbeck, Dagbok Ostind, Resa, 232 (1757); Reise Ostind, 302 (1765); 

 Voy, China East Ind, I. 375 (1771).— Thunberg, Fl Jap, 121 (1784). 



Loureiro, Fl Cochin. 183 (1790), 



Rhus chinense Osbeck, Daghok Ostind. Resa. 232 (1757); Reise Osiind. 302 

 (1765); Voy. China East Ind. I. 375 (1771). — Miller, Did, ed. 8 (1768). 



Rhus semialata Murray in Comm. Soc. Goetting. VI. 27, t. 3 (1784). — Miquel 

 in Ann, Mus. Lugd.-Bat. II. 84 (1866); Prol. FL Jap. 16 (1866). — Hemsley 

 in Jour. Linn, Soc. XXIII. 146 (1886). — Sargent in Garden & Forest, 

 VI. 163 (1893); For. Fl Jap. 33 (1894). — Diels in Bot. Jahrh. XXIX. 433 

 (1900). — Dunn & Tutcher in Kew Bull Misc. Inform, add. eer. X. 69 

 (Fl Kwangtung & Hongkong) (1912). 



Rhus semialata, /3. Osheckii De Candolle, Prodr, II. 67 (1825). — Franchet in 

 Nouv. Arch. Mus. Pans, s^r. 2, V. 230 (PL David. I. 78) (1883). — Engler 

 in De Candolle, Monog. Phaner. IV. 380 (1883). — Shirasawa, Icon. Ess. For. 

 Jap. I. 96, t. 58, fig. 18-34 (1900). — Pampanini in Nuov. Giom. Bot Ital 

 n. ser. XVII. 416 (1910); XVIII. 126 (1911). 



Rhus Osheckii Decaisne ex Steudel, Nomencl Bot. ed. 2, II. 452 (quasi 



synon.) (1841). — Schneider, III Handh. Lauhholzk. II. 156, fig. 102 d 

 (1907). 



iviangsi: Hulmg, thickets, alt. 1300 m., abundant, July 30, 1907 

 (No. 1694; bush 2-4 m.). Western Hupeh: north and south of 

 Ichang, thickets and cliffs, alt. 30-1000 m., abundant, August, Sep- 

 tember and December 1907 (No. 3321; small tree, 5^8 m. tall, flowers 

 white, fruit reddish-brown); Changyang Hsien, margins of woods, 

 alt. 600-1200 m., August 1907 (No. 3321 ^ small tree 5 m. tall, flowers 

 white); without locality, September 1900 (Veitch Exped. No. 1710); 

 Patung Hsien, A. Henry (No. 4890); " Monte Triora," alt. 1990 m., 

 July 1907, C. Silvestn (No. 1321); "Monte Tien-pong-scian," alt. 

 1990 m., October 1907, C. Silvestri (No. 1323). North-central 

 China: Miao-wang-san, July 1899, Hugh Scallan. Western Sze- 

 ch'uan: Kiating Fu, thickets, alt. 300-1000 m., September 1908 

 (No. 3321*^; small tree 3-8 m. tall, flowers white); Mt. Omei, August 

 1904 (Veitch Exped. No. 4812). Yunnan: Mengtsze, mountains, 

 alt. 1600 m., A. Henry (No. 11034). Chekiang: vicinity of Ning- 



