IX, C, 1 Merrill: Plants of Guam 83 
MENISPERMACEAE 
TINOSPORA Miers 
TINOSPORA HOMOSEPALA Diels in Philip. Journ. Sci. 8 (1913) Bot. 
158. ? 
McGregor 586, G. E. S. 479. 
Known only from Guam. 
ANONACEAE 
ANONA Linnaeus 
ANONA MURICATA Linn. Sp. Pl. (1753) 536; Safford 184, pl. 38. 
G. E. S. 275, 346, locally known as laguand. 
A native of tropical America, now cultivated in all tropical countries. 
ANONA SQUAMOSA Linn. 1. c. 537; Safford 185, pl. 34. 
G. E. S. 365, locally known as atis. 
Distribution the same as A. muricata. 
ANONA RETICULATA Linn. 1. c. 537; Safford 184. 
G. E. S. 480, McGregor 510, locally known as anonas. 
Distribution the same as A. muricata. 
“CANANGIUM Baillon 
CANANGIUM ODORATUM (Lam.) Baill. ex King in Journ. As. Soc. Beng. 
61? (1892) 41; Koord. & Val. Boomsoort Java 9 (1903) 279; W. F. 
Wight ex Safford in Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 9 (1905) 209. 
Uvaria odorata Lam. Encycl. 1 (1785) 595. 
Cananga odorata Hook. f. & Th. Fl. Ind. 1 (1855) 180. 
G. E. S. 140, locally known as ilang-ilang, its Philippine name. 
Of wide distribution in the Indo-Malayan and Polynesian regions, often 
only in cultivation. Undoubtedly introduced into Guam from the Philip- 
pines. 
W. F. Wight makes the new combination Canangium odoratum in 1905, 
overlooking the fact that the transfer of the specific name to Canangium 
has been made at least twice previous to that date. 
POLYALTHIA Blume 
POLYALTHIA MARIANNAE (Safford) comb. nov. 
Papualthia mariannae Safford in Journ. Wash. Acad. Sci. 2 (1912) 19, 
fig. 1, 2. 
G. E. S. 209, distributed as Orophea, Costenoble s. n., Palomo 1180, the 
last two in the U. S. National Herbarium. 
. After an examination of the flowering material loaned to me by Mr. 
Safford, I can see no particular reason for considering this species other 
than a representative of the genus Polyalthia. My original Guam material 
consisted of fruiting specimens only, and at the time it was studied I decided 
that is was probably a species of Orophea. The flowers, however, impress 
me as being those of typical Polyalthia. 
he Toa Pee 
