Txora.] LXI. RUBIACES. 415 
allied to Z. Pavetta. Leaves rather broader and more obtuse, softly Agere , 
o both sides when young, sed becoming urea s above.w old. 
tomentose or hoary icai lign: limb d iem min 
tolla fruit ot seeds of I. Pavetta. — Wight, Ic. t. 186; ees loweploto; 
Prod. 431. 
ay W.a 
. Australia. voeem Bay, N. W. Coast, 4. Cunningham; Victoria river, 
E em ipe; N. Coast, R. B rown Nok so common in India as I. Pavetta. The 
Australian specimens quite Les with the ordinary Indian — es wild and from - — 
tanic : Garden. e Ceylon ven pudiese ated same name in Thwa 
po fiers, as Seta, by him, in the long eidem SH bee and is probably 
a distinct s 
Section III. Ixora.—Flowers 4-merous. Style with 2 stigmatic lobes 
usually spreading, rarely remaining coherent in species not Australian 
3. I. coccinea, Linn. ; W. and Arn. Prod.427. A tall glabrous raat 
Leaves nearly sessile, from oval or oblong with a more or less. cordate 
tuneate-obovate, obtuse and mucromilste;: or acute or shortly acuminate, rare sen 
ing 3 in. on the flowering branches. Stipules with a fine subulate 
N. A Ca = ssin iin n, Armstrong. —Extends from Ceylon and the Indian 
: Peninsula. to the A other Although the specimens were gathered as part of the: KS 
E me it is possible that this may have been one of the exotic shrubs planted durin 
the time that Port Essington was colonized. 
4. I Timorensis, Den e. Herb. Tim. .90. As im tree, quite 
E. ow-oblong, nearly or sometimes quite as long a 
S globular. $ 2 to 3 lines ceni fos Seeds not seen.—4. Klanderiana, F. Muell 
| Fragm. v.-18. 
— N. Australia. North coast, R. Brown; Port Essington, Armstrong. 
Rëss Dati. Cape York and neighbouring islands, M‘Gillivray, W. Hill; Rocking- 
y, 
The species extends to Timor, and possibly to other islands of the Archipelago. The only 
re "em 3 the E. Indian ones to which it ds be com is I. undulata, Roxb., which has 
"ed iage and inflerescence as well as s corolla, As the calyx-limb in that as in most 
SN Ges is deeply toot gett, - 
5. L Becklerii, Benth. A tall shrub or small tree, quite glabrous. 
i 
