138 THE FLORA OF SINGAPORE. 
A. cuspidatum Muell. ‘Sebasah.” A big shrub, common in 
thick woods, Bukit Timah, Changi, Bukit Mandai, Teban, 
Reservoir woods. 
A, fallar Meisn. Not common, Bukit Timah. 
A. alatum Hook. fil. Thick woods, common, Bukit Timah, 
Changi, Bukit Mandai, Jurong. 
A. bunias Spreng and A. ghaesembilla Gaertn. mentioned in 
Flora Brit. Ind. I have not seen wild. 
Baccaurea. A genus of trees of no great size, with flowers in 
lone scented racemes. Fruit usually a capsule, orange 
colored or brown, splitting and disclosing the seeds en- 
wrapped in an orange pulp hanging from the placentas ; 
sometimes the fruit is a berry, and does not split. Most 
are mcre or less eatable though often acid. 
B. parviflora Muell, ‘‘Setambun.” <A small tree with a knot- 
ted stem, and very hard compact yellow wood, used for 
making sticks. ‘The male flowers are borne in racemes 
in tufts on the stem, they are yellow and smeil like 
cowslips. The female racemes are borne at the foot of 
the tree, so as to lie on the ground. ‘The fruit is a 
spindle-shaped berry, claret colored and eatable though 
acid. A common plant. ‘Tanglin, Bajau, Changi, ete. 
B. macrophyila Muell. Tree small or medium. fruits globose 
dull orange russet, pulp of seed orange, sweet. Garden 
jungle, Selitar. 
B. motleyana King. * Rambai.” A well known fruit, common 
in cultivation and apparently also wild. 
(B. Malayana King. © Tampoi.” Occurs in cultivation but is 
not common.) 
PB. bracteata Muell. A small tree. Common, Bukit Mandai, 
Holland Road, Kranji. 
B. latifolia King, Garden jungle (6264). 
DB. sp. B. in Flor, Brit. Ind. Garden jungle, Kranji. 
