246 WILSON EXPEDITION TO CHINA 
Henry (No. 3219; old leafy branchlets with ripe fruits); Paokang 
Hsien, mountains, October 1901 (Veitch Exped. No. 2650; tree 7 m. 
tall; leafy branches with flowers); without precise locality, A. Henry 
(No. 7518; leafy branchlets with fruits). North-central China: 
Kusan, Hugh Scallan (sterile). Northern Shensi: “ In-kia-po,” 
October 1897, G. Giraldi (leafy branchlets with fruits). Chili: Pe- 
king, Temple of Heaven grounds, September 1905, F. N. Meyer (No. 
187; a tall, spreading Elm, with many small branches bearing small 
leaves and flowering in fall, in winter the bark peels off in curiously 
formed pieces; leafy branchlets with flowers); Hsiao Wu-tai-shan, alt. 
1800 m., August 30, 1903, F. N. Meyer (No. 1385; sterile); Shimen, 
in crevices of decomposed slate rock, August 2, 1913, F. N. Meyer (No. 
1069; sterile). Kiangsu: Shanghai, cultivated, October 15, 1905, 
J.G. Jack (leafy branchlets with fruits). Fokien: Amoy, H. F. Hance 
(No. 1414; leafy branchlets with fruits). Formosa: Bankinsing, 
A. Henry (No. 1529; tree 10 m. tall; leafy branchlets with young 
fruits). 
NORTHEASTERN ASIA. Korea: Fusan, temple grounds, September 6, 1903, 
C. S. Sargent (sterile); Quelpaert, “ circa Hongno, rara," July 1907, U. Faurie (No. 
2008; sterile, leaves small, narrow, acuminate); “ in sepibus Hongno," June 1909, 
Taquet (No. 3268; with a few old fruits, similar to the foregoing specimen); “in 
sylvis Sampargtan," October 1908, T'aquet (No. 1334; leafy branchlets with young 
fruits, typical). 
JAPAN. Hondo: prov. Musashi, Tokyo, Garden Agricultural College, Octo- 
ber 9, 1892, C. S. Sargent (leafy branchlets with flowers); Itabashi, September 6, 
1907 (ex Herb. Sakurai; with young fruits); Hanno, September 1908 (ex Herb. 
Yokohama Nursery Co.; with flowers); Tokyo, November 1909 (ex Herb. Yoko- 
hama Nursery Co.; leafy branchlets with fruits); Meguro, December 1914, H. 
Shirasawa (“ bark: lenticels clear, cracked, narrow, scales small and thin "; leaf- 
less branchlets with ripe fruits); same place and date, H. Shirasawa (“ bark coarse, 
lenticels not clear, scales little larger"; leafless branchlets with fruits); Momo- 
yama, near the emperor Meiji’s tomb, December 5, 1914, H. H. Wilson (No. 7856; 
small bushy tree, 8 m. tall, girth 0.9 m., leaves said to fall early in the spring; leafy 
branchlets with fruits); prov. Yamashiro, Nara, temple grounds, 1892, C. S. Sar- 
gent (small tree, 7 m. tall; leafy branchlets with fruits). Kyushu: prov. Hizen, 
Nagasaki, 1863, C. Mazimowicz (leafy branchlets with fruits); without locality, 
1842, P. de Siebold (ex Herb. Zuccarini as Planera; sterile); without locality (ex 
Herb. Mus. Lugd.-Bat. as Microptelea; leafy branchlets with fruits). 
Daveau (in Bull. Soc. Dendr. France, 1914, 21) describes besides U. Shirasawana, 
mentioned above, U. Sieboldii (l. c. 26, fig. 1, d-d’ and B-B”), which is said to 
represent the true U. japonica Siebold in Verh. Batav. Gen. XII. 28 (nomen nudum, 
non Sargent) (1830). I have failed to detect sufficient differences between the three 
species proposed by Daveau even to keep them as distinct forms. The characters 
on which he has founded his species are too variable. Of U. Sieboldii the samaras 
are said to be larger, 15 mm. long and 8 mm. broad, the leaves are deciduous, and 
the bark is persistent not “s’exfoliant annuellement par plaques." I have not seen 
any fruits longer than 12 mm., although often as broad as 8-9 mm., their shape and 
