Ficus. MONOECIA MONANDRIA, Re: 561 
projecting at right angles or drooping from the larger naked 
branches. Bractes stipule-like, caducous, long before the 
fruit appears. Fruit solitary, short-peduncled, of a short, 
flattish, turbinate shape. Calyx none. 
53. F. eunia, Buch. 
Arboreous. Leaves short-petioled, alternate, bifarious, ob- 
long, semi-cordate at the base, acutely serrate. Fruit turbi- 
nate, ribbed, pedicelled, and generally in pairs, in compound, 
prostrate, radical, and cauline, leafless branchlets. 
A native of Nepal, from thence Dr. Buchanan sent seeds 
to the Botanic garden at Calcutta, at the close of 1809; the 
only tree which was reared, was about twenty feet high ; un- 
commonly well clothed with long spreading branches down 
to the ground, and constantly Joaded with fruit. 
Leaves short-petioled, bifarious, oblong, lanceolate, acute, 
at the base, the lower half protruding so as to form a large 
sub-rotund lobe, which is longer than the petiole, margins a 
little waved, and serrated, scabrous on both sides, from six 
to twelve inches long, and from two to four broad. Fruit 
pedicelled, somewhat turbinate, a little ribbed, of the size of 
a large filbert, hairy, they are generally produced in pairs, 
or in threes, on long, procumbent, radical, and cauline, com- 
pound, leafless branches, in compound racemes often some 
feet long. Calyx of the fruit three-cleft, presses in to the 
calyx. 
54, F. oppositifolia, Willd. iv. 1151. Corom, pi. ii. N. 124. 
Leaves opposite, oblong, serrate. Fruit in axillary pairs, 
or on cauline racemes, round, peduncled, hairy. 
Hind, Konea-Doombur. 
Sans, Kako-Doomburika. 
Beng. Kakodoomoor. 
 Teling. Boda-Mamadee. 
A small tree, a native of the banks of — and othe 
VOL, III, ae 
