198 
He also added the localities, Islands of Batjam, Borneo, Mt. 
Arfak, in Dutch New Guinea, and the Aru Islands, further 
materials having been collected by Zollinger, De Vriese, Korthals, 
and Beccari. 
5 to 6 i Tt is one of these seeds that has now been sen Tr 
White, and proves to belong to Macrozanonia macr carpa. 
n (Tite Merrill, of the Philippine Bureau of 
Science, described Zanoni } 
Lastly, we have the record of Miss L. Gibbs that in the Mt. 
Arfak district of New Guinea “‘ Zanonia mac i 
great butterflies, for which, indeed, I took them at first in the 
distance.’’ 
The species appears to be widely diffused, from Java and 
Borneo, to Negros and Mindanao in the Philippines, the Aru 
Islands in the Moluceas, and both western and eastern New 
nea. 
The following are the references i— 
oa anon macrocarpa, Cogn. in Bull. Herb, Boiss: ;. p- 612 
bg Schum. & Lauterb. Fl. Deutsch. Siidsee, p. 589 (1901); 
vogn. in Bull. Soe. Bot. Belg. xliii. p. 358 (1906). 
Zanonia macrocarpa, Blume, Bijdr. p. 937 (1825) ; Ser. in DC. 
