306 WILSON EXPEDITION TO CHINA 
Jap. I. 433 (Kasinoki) (1875). — Engler in Engler & Prantl, Nat. Pflanzenfam. II. 
Abt. 1, 76, fig. 54-55 (1888). — Dippel, Handb. Laubholzk. II. 17, fig. 6 (1892). — 
Koehne, Deutsche Dendr. 139 (1893). — De Wildeman, Icon. Hort. Then. II. 17, t. 45 
(1900). — Schneider, Ill. Handb. Laubholzk. 1. 241, fig. 151 i-k, 155 d-f (1904). — 
Matsumura, Ind. Pl. Jap. II. pt. 2, 35 (Kasinoki) (1912). — Bean, Trees & 
Shrubs Brit. Isl. I. 266 (1914). 
Br etia Kaempferi Siebold in Jaarb. Kon. Nederl. Maatsch. Tuinb. 
25 (Kruidk. Naaml.) (nomen nudum, non Siebold 1830) (1844). — Mouille- 
fert, Traité Arb. Arbriss. II. 1218 (1898), exclud. synon. 
Broussonetia Sieboldii Blume, Mus. Bot. Lugd.-Bat. II. 86 (1852). 
Morus Kaempferi Seringe, Descr. Cult. Muriers, 228, Atl. 11, t. 23 (1855). 
Broussonetia papyrifera, var. Kaempferi Hort. ex Lavallée, Arb. Segrez. 242 
(pro synon.) (1877). 
NORTHEASTERN ASIA. Korea: Quelpaert “in sepibus Typyengai ”?, 
August 1909, T'aguet (No. 3220; sterile). 
This species is common in Japan from Tokyo southward, and in parts of Shikoku 
and Kyushu it is abundant and is largely used for making a tough kind of paper. 
E. H. W. 
CUDRANIA Trécul. 
Cudrania tricuspidata Bureau in Lavallée, Arb. Segrez. 243 (1877). — 
vw Dippel, Handb. Laubholzk. II. 19 (1892). — Koehne, Deutsche Dendr. 
139 (1893). — Mouillefert, Traité Arb. Arbriss. II. 1220 (1898). — 
Schneider, Dendr. Winterstud. 96, fig. 112 a-e (1903); Ill. Handb. 
Laubholzk. Y. 242, fig. 151 1, 156 a-e, 157 (1904). — Ascherson & 
Graebner, Syn. Mitteleur. Fl. IV. 585 (1911). 
Maclura tricuspidata Carriére in Rev. Hort. 1864, 390, fig. 37; 1872, 55, 138, 
fig. 6-7. — Nicholson, Ill. Dict. Gard. II. 312, fig. 496-7 (1887). 
Cudranus trilobus Hance in Jour. Bot. VI. 49 (1868). 
Cudrania triloba Forbes in Jour. Bot. XXI. 145 (1883). — Franchet in Nouv. 
Arch. Mus. Paris, sér. 2, VII. 80 (Pl. David. I. 270) (1884). — Oliver in 
Hooker’s Icon. Pl. XVIII. t. 1792 (1888). — Hosie, Three Years in Western 
China, 21 (1889). — Kew Bull. Misc. Inform. 1888, 291, t. — Hemsley in 
Jour. Linn. Soc. XXVI. 470 (1894). — E. Pritzel in Bot. Jahrb. XXIX. 
298 (1900). — André in Rev. Hort. 1905, 363. — Nakai in Jour. Coll. Sci. 
Tokyo, XXXI. 199 (1911). — Matsumura, Ind. Pl. Jap. Il. pt. 2, 35 
(1912). — Bean, Trees & Shrubs Brit. Isl. t 440, fig. (1914). 
Western Hupeh: Ichang, ete., alt. 30-900 m., October 1907 
(No. 252; tree 3-10 m. tall, fruits strawberry-red); same locality, 
etc., May 1907 (No. 252*; bush or tree, leaves used for feeding the 
silkworms; #); same locality, A. Henry (No. 2322; 9). Yunnan: 
Mengtsze, alt. 1400 m., A. Henry (No. 9987; tree 3-7 m. tall, red fruit 
eaten by children; 9). Chekiang: Ningoo; 1908, D. Macgregor 
(sterile). Gëntral China: “ Kur-san,” Hugh Scallan (No. 119; 
dg). Kiangsu: Purple Mount near Nanking, on rocky slopes, June 
