Anodendron.] XCIV. APOCYNACEE. (J. D, Hooker.) 669 
2. A. Candolleanum, Wight Ic. t. 1309 (excl. fruit and seeds) ; quite 
glabrous, leaves elliptic obtusely cuspidate thickly coriaceous, nerves 8-10 pairs, 
petiole 1 in., calyx-lobes acute. Miquel Fl, Ind. Bat. ii. 455, A. rubescens, 
Teijsm. § Binnend, Cat. Hort. Bogor. 
Matacca; Capt. Wight, Maingay (Kew Distrib. 1087).—Disrrrs. Borneo. 
Very similar in inflorescence and flowers to A. paniculatum, but petioles longer, 
leaves very different in texture, sepals acute, corolla-throat nearly glabrous, style 
distinct, stigma smaller, follicles much thinner-walled, acute, and seeds (unripe) 
apparently much more slender, 
3. A. rhinosporum, Thwaites Enum. 195; quite glabrous, leaves 
coriaceous elliptic-oblong or -lanceolate obtuse or obtusely acuminate, nerves 
very slender, petiole j in., flowers in. long. 
Cryton; Ambagamowa and Matuvatte districts, Thwaites. 
A much smaller and narrower-leaved plant than either of the foregoing, with a 
smaller panicle, Leaves 2-4 by j-1j in. ; petiole 3-3 in. Follicles 3-5 in. Seeds 
1 in, 
4. A. pauciflorum, Hook. f. ; quite glabrous, leaves oblong or oblong- 
lanceolate obtusely acuminate, nerves very slender, cymes small short axillary 
puberulous few-fld., flower } in. long. ; 
Penana; Maingay (Kew Distrib. 1101). 
Branches smooth, glabrous. Leaves 4-5 by 13-2 in., red-brown when dry; 
nerves 8-10 pairs, slightly arched, very slender; petiole 4 in., stout. Cymes much 
shorter than the leaves; peduncle stout, j-1l in.; bracts ovate, crowded; pedicels 
very short.  Calyz-lobes obtuse. Corolla glabrous, lobes acute in bud, strongly 
twisted; tube about equalling the linear-lanceolate faleate obtuse lobes; throat 
pubescent. Style and stigma together pyriform, seated on the glabrous carpels. 
Follicles 4-5 by 3-1 in., horizontal, straight, tapering from a rounded base to the 
subacute points, terete, smooth, pericarp thick. Seeds % in. long, ovoid, beaked, flat, 
glabrous; coma three times as long, brown, 
38, ICHNOCARPUS, Zr. 
Climbing shrubs. Leaves opposite, uerves distant, Flowers small or minute, 
in long terminal and axillary paniculate cymes. Calyx 5-fid, glandular or not 
within. Corolla salver-shaped, throat contracted or villous; lobes narrowed to 
the obtuse point, overlapping to the right, upper half deflexed in bud. Stamens 
at or below the middle of the tube; anthers sagittate, conniving over and 
adhering to the stigma, cells spurred at the base. Disc free, 5-lobed. Carpels 
2, distinct, exserted from the disc, many-ovuled, hairy ; style short, top obconie, 
stigma columnar. Follicles spreading or divaricate, slender and subterete or 
rigid and compressed, Seeds narrowed at the tip, coma deciduous, albumen 
copious; cotyledons long, flat, radicle short, superior.—DISTRIB. Species 5 or 6, 
Indian, Malayan and Australian. 
1 X. frutescens, Br. in Hort. Kew. ed. 2, ii. 69; glabrous or branches 
and leaves beneath more or less softly tomentose, leaves elliptic oblong or lan- 
ceolate acute, cymes pubescent, corolla-tube glabrous, mouth villous. Benth. 
Fl, Austral. iv. 315; Wight Ic, t. 480; Wall. Cat. 1674; Brand. For, Fl. 327; 
Grah. Cat. Bomb. Pl. 113; Dalz. E Gibs, Bomb. Fl. 147; Kurz For, Fl. ii, 
185. I. radicans, Wall. Cat. 1676. I. dasycalyx, Miquel Fl, Ind. Bat. ii. 449. 
I. leptodictyus, F. Muell. Fragmenta, vi. 118. Echites frutescens, Wall. Cat." 
1674. Apocynum frutescens, Lénn.—Lyama, Roxb. in As. Res, 1, 201.— Burm. 
Fi, Zeyl. 23, t. 12, fig. 1. 
