Crema: AURANTIACE X. gc 
out the Peninsula. We have also seen it from Goalpora in Hamilton's her- 
barium. 
* 337. (3) M. Sumatrana (Roxb.:) leaflets 5-7, ovate, acuminated, with 
an emarginate point, shining: peduncles solitary, 1-flowered, terminal, or in 
the axils of the upper leaves: berry oblong, usually 2-seeded.—Rowb. fi. Ind. 
2, p. 875; Wall. L. n. 6369.—M. paniculata, Jack. Mal. misc. 1. p. 31; in 
Hook. bot. misc. 2. p. 79; Hook. exot. fl. t. 79.—Rumph. Amb. 5. t. 17 
(deser. good ; fig. bad as to the leaves). 
We doubt extremely that this is a Peninsular species: we have inserted it 
' because Wallich states his letter a to be from Heyne's herbarium, but it pro- 
bably belongs to our last species: the only certain synonym in Wallich is d. 
The two species are certainly very closely allied, but the descriptions in Rum- 
phius, Jack, Blume, and Roxburgh, of the plant from the islands, agree in the 
above characters. 
VIII. COOKIA. Sonn. voy. 2. t. 131; Lam. ill. t. 354. 
Flowers and carpels symmetrical. Calyx 4-5-cleft. Petals 4—5, oval, 
very concave and navicular or almost carinate: flower-buds carinately 
angled. Stamens 8-10: filaments distinct, subulate: anthers roundish, 
Ovary on a short stalk, covered with glands éach bearing a tuft of hairs, 4-5- 
celled: ovules 2, one above the other, in each cell. Style short, thick. 
Stigma 4-5-toothed. Fruit globose, baccate, with a thin tough rind, 5- 
celled, or by abortion 1-2-celled: cells 1-seeded, filled with a balsamic li- 
quid.—Small trees. Leaves pinnate: leaflets alternate or opposite, oblique 
at the base. Panicles terminal. 
The above char i en from C. punctata and C. graveolens (Amyris gra- 
veolens, herb. Ham): C. geom lla, Lindl. in Wall. L.n. 6367, and C. falcata, 
DC., are both too little known, its probably belong to quite distinct genera. Amy- 
ris pentaphylla, Roxb. (fl. Ind. 2. p. 247, and in E. I. C. mus. tab. 1551), evidently ap- 
proaches very closely, but Roxburgh says that there are ** many ovula in each” cell 
of the ovary : the flowers, as in C. graveolens, are in the quaternary proportion, 
338. (1) C. punctata (Retz:) leaflets in three or four pairs, obliquely 
ovate-oblong, acuminated, quite entire, glabrous on both sides, scabrous on 
the nerves beneath : petals 5: stamens 10.—DC. prod. 1. p. 537 ; Spr. syst. 2. 
p. 814; Roxb. fl. Ind. 2. p. 382; in E. I. C. mus. tab. 943; Wall.! L. n. 6366 ; 
Wight! cat. n. 305, 365.—Quinaria Lansium, Lour.— Rumph. Amb. 1. t. 55. 
Flower-buds at first very minute, as in Rumphius' figure, in which state 
e incipient ovary appears quite glabrous: they afterward increase, and the 
glands on the ovary become furnished with a tuft of hairs. 
IX. CLAUSENA. Burm.; Lam. ill. t. 310. 
Flowers and carpels symmetrical. Calyx 4-toothed. Petals 4, oval, 
concave, patent: flower-buds globose. Stamens 8, nearly equal: filaments 
distinct; below the middle connivent, dilated, and concave and slightly 
vaulted, receiving the angles of the ovary ; subulate above : anthers ovate or . 
oblong. Torus elevated in the middle into a stalk to the ovary. Ovary 4- 
celled, glabrous : ovules 2, one above the other, in each cell. Style cylindri- 
cal. Stigma obtuse, entire or 4-lobed. Berry dryish, 1-seeded. Seed-coat 
membranaceous.—Shrubs or trees with pinnated leaves, and terminal or axil- 
panicles or racemes. 
by a fourth part. 
The number of parts of the flower are occasionally increased 
To this genus ains several of Roxburgh’s species of Amyris (fi. Ind. 2. p. E.I 2» 
QUAS (d. Snina, Rosh in E. I. C. mus. tab. 1054), A. ee dei 
mus. tab. 1408), 4. suffruticosa (E. I. C. mus. tab. 1409), A. Sumatrana and 4. punc- 
