308 LI. ONAGRARIEJE. 
;Emdesvour river, 4. Cunningham ; — river, Bowm 
d A mon 
oi ut 
: with some ie it is cers ` 
is, and —— and others ` 
are full R h’s Z. parviflora. . diffusa amilt., although 
he also thought Rheede’s Caramba might be the se i ii is in vic qui phi in the loug 
- s L. e: ostrala, Roxb. ` 
Order LII. SAMYDACEJE. 
Sepals free or united at the base into a 4- or 5-lobed (rarely 2-, 3- or at 
or nore bosd calyx, free from the ovary or more or less adherent. Peah. 
either as many as the sepals or calyx-lobes, inserted at their baia, 
or had Ovary superior or more or less inferior, with 2, 3 or more 
dons.— Trees or shrubs. ` Leaves alternate, undivided, usually toot 
pules small or none. Flowers hermaphrodite or rarely dicecious 
A cousiderable Order, if taken with the limits above given, and widely à i 
the New and the Old World, chiefly within the tro ropics. The two following genera e? 
to two of — — into which it may be divided, and ‘which are conside T "y 4 
me & Ordan z. Caseariee or Samydeæ proper, ‘without petals, the stame Ka 
and j cs with. pers ti petals, the stamens inserted eum or in S 
mée the petals. 
den none. Stame t iliate 
da^ OWA E in a single row, alternating r short cili ^ qz m 
Petals i — as — ‘Stamens is opposito them, singly o or in n clusters. 3 H d 
1. CASEARIA, Liun. 
Calyx-lobes 4 or 5. Petals none. Stamens 6 to 15 or rarely mor 
nating with as many short ciliate or hairy scales Geier ?, sit keier 
series and united in a perigynous ring at the base. Ovary superio 
with 3 or rarely 4 parietal placentas; style entire or shortly 3-lo bel. ` 
somewhat succulent, opening in valves or more fleshy and indehiscent i 
often with an arillus.—Trees or shrubs. Leaves usually, bub aot’ 
