NEW OR XOTKWOHTHY I'lilLIPPINE PLANTS, VII. 273 



Palawan. .Malcanipo, For. Bur. 1L2',S Maiinlo, March, 190S, said by the ool- 

 lector to be common in old clearin<is, and locally known as Marango. The heiHit 

 is given as 30 m and the diameter of the trunk as !I0 cm. while tlie timber is 

 said to be used for construction pnrjjoses. 



Azadiraclita A. Jiiss. lias previously been a monotypic genus, consistin"- of 

 the one species A. indica A. Jnss. extending from India to Java. The species 

 above described can at once be distinguished by its entire leaflets, its panicles 

 much longer than the leaves, not sliorter as in A. iiHlicc, and its longer flowers. 



HEYNEA IJoxb. 



Heynea sumatrana :\riq. Ann. :Mus. Bot. 4 (1868) 60; C. DC. Monog. Pliaii 

 1 (1878) 714. 



ticutinanthe engleri Elm. Leafl. Philip. Bot. 1 (1908) 298. 



Luzon. Province of Tayabas. Lucl)an. Elmer 0179; Atimonan, Fur. Bur. iHiH 

 Kobhe. Basilan, HctUier s. n. 



The first representative of the genus to be found in the Philippines, for 

 Trichilia riwosa Blanco, although reduced to Heynea frijiiga Roxb., by C. De- 

 Candole, is, I feel certain, not a Heynea. The type of ^cutinanthe engleri Elm., 

 is a specimen with very young fruits, mature fruits or flowers not present, and 

 is manifestly referable to Heynea and not a Burseraceous plant, wheie it was 

 placed by Mr. Elmer. The Philippine specimens agree closely with those of 

 H. sionatrana Miq., taken from cultivated trees in the Buitenzorg Botanical 

 Garden, and there seems to be little doubt as to their specific identity. Miquel's 

 species has, however, been reduced by King to Heynea frijuga var. muUljuga 

 C. DC, but a specimen of ^yallieh 1259 from Penang, the type number of this 

 variety, is in our herbarium and does not agree with our material of H. sumatrana. 

 nor with Miquel's description, and it seems that while Heynea sumatrana Miq., 

 is not the same as H. trijuga var. multijuga, still it may not be specifically distinct 

 from H. trijuga Roxb. 



Sumatra. 



DYSOXYLUM Blume. 



Dysoxylum klemmei sp. nov. § Eudysoxylum. 



AvhoY subglabra, circiter 1(J m alta; foliis alternis, iniiiaripinnatis, 40 

 ad 45 c-ni longis, rhachidibus densissime ferriigineo-pubenilis ; foliolis 

 circiter 15 cm longis, alternis vel suboiDpositis, circiter 17, g]a1)ris, nitidis, 

 brunneis, apice acuniinatis, basi acutis, valde inaequilateralibus, reticulis 

 obsoletis: paniculis axillaribus f(3lia subaequantibus, densissime ferrugi- 

 neo-puberulis ; floril)us l:-meris, circiter 5 mm longis. 



A tree, nearly glal)rous except the petioles, young branches and in- 

 floresenee. Leaves alternate, 40 to 50 cm long, odd-pinnate, the leaflets 

 aliout 17, the rachis densely ferruginous-pnberulent ; leaflets alternate or 

 subopposite, oblong, al)out 15 cm long, 4 to 5 cm wide, subeoriaceous, 

 shining, dark-brown when dry, glabrous, the apex acuminate, the base 

 very strongly inequilateral, one side much narrower than the other and 

 always acnte or acuminate, the other side often rounded, sometimes acute 

 and extending farther down the midrib; nerves 8 to 13 on each side of 

 the midrib, not prominent, the reticulations, obsolete ; petiolules about 1 

 cm long, glal)rous or somewhat pubenilent. Panicles axillarv, about as 



