Chaulmoogra. dioecia polyandria. 835 



natural number when all come to maturity. The berries are 

 palatable and reckoned wholesome. 



4. T. sepiaria. Willd. iv. 831. R. Corom. pL 1. JV. G8. 

 Shrubby. Thorns simple, leaf and flower-bearing'. Leaves 



oblong-, obtuse, serrate, smooth. Peduncles axillary, and ter- 

 minal. Berries about five-seeded, 



Sideroxylon spinoswn. Willd. i. 1091. 



Teling. Kanroo. 



Courou-moelli. Rheed. Mai. v. t. 39. 



A small shrub, common on uncultivated land, in vari- 

 ous parts of India. 



5. T. sapida. Willd. iv. 830. R. Corom.pl. 1. N. 69. 

 Arboreous. Thorns axillary, simple. Leaves oval, serrate, 



smooth. Peduncles axillary, few-flowered. Berries from 

 eight to ten-seeded. 



Sans. Swadoo-K^«ltMka. 



Beng. Bincha. 



Teling. Pedda-Kanroo. 



A native of Coromandel and Bengal, though by no means 

 so conunon as sepiaria. 



G. F. ohcordata. R. 



Shrubby, armed. Leaves obcordatc, crenatc. Flowers 

 terminal. Berries ten-seeded. 

 A native of Chittagong. 



CHAULMOOGRA. R. 

 Male. Calyx from four to five-lobed. Corol five-petal- 

 led, with a nectarial scale under the base of each. Fkmale. 

 Calyx and corol as in the male. Germ superior, one-celled ; 

 ovoi numerous on five parietal receptacles. Styles five. 

 Berry dry, one-celled, many-seeded. Embryo furnished 



MJlh a pcrisperm; direction of the radicle various. 



5 a 2 



