EASTERN COAST OF THE MALAY PENINSULA. 327 
STEREOSPERMUM FIMBRIATUM, DC. 
Not common. Collected at Pekan by Dr. Haviland, Тһе Malays in Malacca call it 
* Cha-Cha.” 
S. GLANDULOSUM, Miq. 
A small bushy tree with pale pinkish-white flowers. Near Kwala Tenok, on the 
Tahan River. 
DoLICHANDRONE RHEEDII, Seem. 
Mangrove-swamp, Kwala Brawas, near Kwala Pahang. 
PEDALINES. 
SESAMUM INDICUM, DC. 
A weed here and there, on sandy banks in the Tembeling River. 
LENTIBULARIEÆ. 
UTRICULARIA FLEXUOSA, Vahl. 
Pools on the heath at Kwala Pahang. 
U. BIFIDA, Linn. 
Damp sandy spots at Kwala Pahang. 
This is the commonest species of this section here. Itis very plentiful in ditches іп 
sandy country in Singapore. 
U. punctata, Wall. 
Chenei Lake (77. Fox). Flowers pale blue. 
U. VERTICILLATA, Benj. 
Same locality. 
U. racemosa, Wall. 
Plentiful in some places at Kwala Pahang. 
A charming little plant, with pure white flowers like a miniature lily of the valley. 
It is to be met with also on the sandy open country between Tana Merah and Changi in 
“ 
Singapore. 
U. MINUTISSIMA, Vahl? 
A minute species with small mauve-pink flowers. Vahl’s description (Enum. i. 204) is 
so meagre that one cannot be at all sure what was intended. His plant was collected by 
Koenig in Malacca; but the only common blue-flowered species I have seen there was 
U. affinis, var. Griffithii, of which, however, one can hardly say that the stem is “ capil- 
laris” even in stunted specimens. On the other hand, this very delicate plant from 
Pahang has mauve-pink, not, strictly speaking, blue flowers. 
CYRTANDREZ. 
ÆSCHYNANTHUS LoBBIANA, Hook. 
Kwantan, Pekan. 
The commonest species in the Peninsula. 
Ж, LONGICAULIS, Wall. 
Pulau Manis. 
