( 446 ) 
In consequence of having received additional specimens from India 
during the printing of this volume, and of having obtained the unlimited 
use of Dr Hooker's valuable copy of the drawings presented by Dr 
Roxburgh to the East India Company's Museum, we are enabled to 
make the following 
ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS. 
No. 1. add, C. Gouriana, Roxb. in E. I. C. mus. tab. 1453. 
— 17. add, D. Indica, Roxb. in E. I. C. mus. tab. 101. 
— 20. add, M. champaca, Roxb. in E. I. C. mus. tab. 1071. 
— 25. add, Uv. odorata, Roxb. in E. I. C. mus. tab. 1986. 
— 32. add, Unona moniliformis, Roxb. in E. I. C. mus. tab. 956. 
— 33. add, Unona odoratissima, Roxb. in E. I. C. mus. tab. 955. 
— 35. add, Unona altissima, Rowb. in E. I. C. mus. tab. 954. * 
— 41. When the character was printed we had only seen the leaves and 
fruit: since, however, we have discovered a misplaced specimen of the male 
inflorescence (Wight! cat. n. 522), and received others in the same state in a 
good condition from the Peninsula, which enable us to determine that Coc- 
culus suberosus, the type of De Candolle's genus Cceculus, does not agree 
with his character, but is the Anamirta of Colebrooke; and although the 
** Cocculus Indicus” of commerce must thus be excluded from the genus as 
Ege defined, it may be inserted at the beginning of the order with the 
following character :— 
exa ANAMIRTA. Colebr. 
Flowers diecious. Calyx of 6 sepals in a double series with 2 close- 
pressed bracteoles. Corolla none. Mats. Stamens united into a central 
column dilated at the apex : anthers numerous, covering the whole globose 
apex of the column. Ferm. Flowers unknown. Drupes 1-3, 1-celled, 1- 
seeded. Seed globose, deeply excavated at the hilum. Albumen fleshy: 
cotyledons very thin, diverging.— T wining, with a corky bark. Leaves more 
or less cordate-ovate. Flowers in lateral compound racemes. 
41. (1) A. Cocculus (W. & A.)—A. paniculata, Colebr. in Linn. soe. trans. 
13. p. 52. and 66 ; Wight ! cat. tu o on Cocculus, Linn.—M. 
heteroclitum, Rowb. hort. Bengh. p. 105.—M. monadelphum, Rowb. in E. I. C. 
mus. tab. 130.— Cocculus suberosus, W. & A. p. 11.——Mountainous parts of 
the Peninsula. : 
Most of the synonyms we have adduced, at p. 12, still appear to us to pi- 
long to it, although it must be confessed that the old figures in Rheede, and 
particularly in Rumphius, give no idea of the plant. Rheede (Mal. 7. t. 1.) 
represents in some flowers the stamens long and distinct, in others the an- 
thers sessile, and he describes the flowers “ apicibus flavis adspersi.” — — 
— 46. add, Men. hirsutum, Rowb. in E. I. C. mus. tab. 129. 
— 54. add, Tamara rubra, Roxb. in E. I. C, mus. tab. 663.—T. alba, Roxb. 
4. e. tab. 664.— Rheed. Mal. 11. t. 30: Rumph. Amb. 6. t. 13. 
— 55. add, N. Cachlara, Roxb. in E. I. C. mus. tab. 659. 
9 
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