284 XLVIII. MYRTACEJE. [ Eugenia. 
pm lateral on the old wood below the leaves, the ultimate cymes dense. 
alyx sessile, turbinate-campanulate, the lobes very short and broad at the 
margin, esame t entire when the flower is fully out. ` Petals cohering and fall- 
Wight and Arn. Prod. 329, with the synonyms adduced; Eugenia M | 
. Muell. Fragm. v. 33. ; 
Queensland. E pce W. ec 
. S. Wales. . Moo 
Very common in Fas India wi the Së, where the fruit is much eaten. 
Srorrow III. JawBosa.—Flowers in trichotomous panicles or eymes, 
calyx-tube more or less produced above the Ovary, prominently lobed, the 
lobes usually persistent. Petals free and spreadin 
j 
CH section, like Syzygium, is limited to the Old World, Sieg where naturalized from 
€ = 
rmiflora, F. Muell. Fragm. v ~ 83, A tree of 30 to 40 ft, 
or oniy a dE, 3 to 5 in. long, narrowed into a petiole often ib 
above 1 in. long; anthers oblong. Gë very thick er fleshy, with 2 
small cells, each with about 8 ovules. Fruit ovoid-urceolate, crowned by the 
SE nearly 2 in. long. 
Queensland. Rockingham Bay, Dallachy ; Maryborough, W. Hill. The species ap- 
pear to be oe nearly allied to E. Malaccensis, Tiida’ Kleer in India and the TRE 
O4 eyana, F. Muell. Fragm. v. 14. A tree of to 10 ft. 
with an ashy bark a nd spreading branches (Dallachy), E gine 
Leaves elliptical- otia: to almost obovate, shortly and obtusely ae" 
61 
diam Petals nearly 4 lines diameter, de and Soit dis 
Barone half as long again as the petals. Ovary in the narrow 
E: with numerous ovules in each cell. Fruit globular, red, about p» 
1a 
d and, b om Bay, the red fruit Id in large quanties , od liri ; 
od ji m, Dal The species is very nearly wen to the E. Indian A 
EA Roxb edy thy in the leaves narrow ies at the b | 
