ILLUSTRATIONS OF 
A that 
5! 
a a £ Pies 
chs s name as the better of the two, though we =e 
bot I have now ascertained that babe | was the 
nearer r aight of the three, but that we wrong 
The examination of flower-buds before feces invaria- 
bly showed a perianth of eight ore while flowers after 
aathesie - io seg showe ake one of four, and these sae 
a ~~ interior or coroloide one 
having ieee aaa bei n neither apetalous, nor 
spurious, from the seonmee of its calyx, = apt: judged it 
advisable to give anew name, an elected one 
equally expressive of past and, po auibly, in, nt blun- 
ca which will not, I conceive, require further altera- 
4 IL Leaves of the Perianth sg ae 2, petals 2 2 
or sepals 4, petals 0 ?) Apoteriam, Blum 
9. C. Moontt, (R.W.) Ramuli terete -aves long, linear 
lanceolate < 2 pauperis aes 1 acute, flora l ones 
abow ers short pedi soiled, 
wards eh forming to- 
arge leapy terminal panicles: ‘floral envelopes 4, 
e interior pair the larger: froit—-. 
C. longifolium, Moon’s MSS. not Willdenow. 
Ceylon.— Eastern Korle, Moon. 
This plant seems only to have been found by Mr. 
Moon—and the specimen before me is oe pe as dp 
prt ter being e fro 
s of the older ti Scher: be 
larger ones at vga a fear in a Length) and the smuller 
almost oval floral ones, mi the sfodm terns, 
many flowered, ak cles, see to indicate, that 
tree when in full flower, must be one of eat alin 
beauty. 
10. C. Burmanni, (R.W.) Young shoots, quadrangular, 
tomentose, leaves nie or slightly obovate, ahah 
sometimes sub-emarginate, panicles small, axillary, few 
somered, sarge els eae paper d longer yee the 
ey ees at the base with a uous 
i aa fruit ry ies or 
very sl johtly oval, 
C. calaba, Lin. partly.—Burm. Thes. Zeyl. tab. 60. 
“cong 
same, 
dly oval smaller, the in- 
florescence also differs a little ; in both it is VERT Y 
ari % 
but more decide 
numerous and the peduncles and pedicels cea the 
structure, however, of 33 flower is the same: the fruit I 
have not seen, and while it remains un prefer 
considering this form a variety rather than a neiews 
— 
. 
leaves from oval to obovate, spelt manees oe 
ore uy 
uous bractea: lence 
pea y from Mergui sais teince be- 
It has the r leaves 
rae first. t with the short ccakettad 
has in . addition the bractew, v 
T havea 
tween the re at 
te panic es. 
which 
small fruit 
oie # i of 
INDIAN BOTANY. 129 
in the Ceylon plants are very small, almost inconspicu- 
ous and early deciduous, as long as. the pedicels and as 
permanent as the flowers. 
acti i Leaves oblong oval or obovate, very ob- 
tuse, often arginate at the apex: panicles much shorter. 
than the sits axillary, pedicels short, almost conceal- 
ed sighs the lanceolate, acute, pubescent bractea: fruit 
"2. 
“Mert soe ose Herb. es sai my 595—Flower 
and frai um sulatri. ? Blu 
ik C. itropetalay sarge ) ‘iLeavesshort petioled, oval, 
lanceolate, very finely serrulate: 
corolla = sled, a eases Fl. Ind. 608. 
Motuccas.—Of this spe pe I know nothing beyond 
what is expressed in the above brief eopzee ter.—It how- 
ever belongs to - eectibe, as he considers all the 
leaves of the pereanth petals, and ac vaabanse nb the 
genus as ioviia « an n8 petaled corolla. 
Species imperfectly known, 
12. C. surega, (Buch. Koxb.) ‘‘ Leaves linear, oblong, 
flowers fares below the leaves.’’ Roxb. Fl. I 
2-608. 
AACS ee (Roxb. Fl. Ind. 2-608.) “ Twi 
square, leaves lanceolar, obtuse, lucid, finely veined’ 
(acute at the oe Blume) Roxb. |. c. C. ania 
—— a 1-2 
Se biaiees Roxbur, 
dathary Blume have seen 
ie on of this _ our 
wledge of its genus is 
therefore only conjectural. 
L4. x pes de And Wall. L. 4844. 
5. C ? margin 4345. 
6-0: ‘pda. 4346, 
z. ee pulcherimum, 4848, 
4849. 
9. c cisuaiotian: 4850. 
0. C. re 4851. “ Certe non hujus 
geek. ibs (Wal 1) 
Kayvea—Wall. 
or . — . Bound) ere than the calyx) 
Stam ents united at the base; anth 
orbioula, éells eared round the eigt of a broad circular 
vu 1-celled, with several oO erect 
ovules attached to ne Sai Style one, stigma 4- 
er 
the branc 
ponies axill nd te ce 
ongeste: r the ends of the branches and ae forming by 
their union ise terminal panicles 
K. floribunda, Wall. Pl. As. He 3, page 5, tab. 210. 
a 
This genus is very ee aad allied to Calophyllum, agr 
ing with it in habit, infl ibe tects gt no agen Se the 
structure of the flowers. ectivum 
of the anther is dilated so that the pollen cl cells, in apace 
being approximated and each other, are 
Spi Too ool ake ates oars ave 3 ] 
ovules, while iy ae sain In Garcini » oval 
of Kayea has 4 ornies = Calophltm itis - 
