2 
Gen, Plant. ii. p. 691. Ancylocladus beccarianus O. K. Rev. Gen. 
1, p. 412 (nomen) ; Pierre in Bull. Soc. Linn. Paris, ii. p. 98. 
Borneo: Sarawak, forests of Bintula, Beecari, 3764; Baram, 
Hose, 24. 
Urnularia is allied to Willughbeia and Chilocarpus. It differs from 
panicles, and, to judge from the only fruit known so far (see below 
under U. ovatzfolia), in the very different structure of the s 
Willughbeia possessing exalbumiaous seeds with large 2 Die thick 
cotyledons. So far as the seeds are concerned t ew genus 
approaches Chilocarpus very closely, with this exception, ‘that the testa 
and the albumen are finely but deeply grooved on the back, the 
e€ a 
= gs Chilocarpus. Urnularia comprises at present five ah viz. 
EO ag ae (Willughbera flavescens, Dyer 
A 
Brit. Ind. i 25), U. javanica, Seu (W caer aes javanien “BL ), 
U. hick wii Rtapt described above, and tw cies from 
Borneo, the descriptions of whic ‘are given "bel flow f 
pletely open. It will also be seen from this figure that the mouth of the 
eben of Py = geen is cai furnished with ‘small lobulate tubercies’ 
. ¢, nor have I been able to find such 
tenses in » Witughein oblonga, pee This is placed in FI. Brit. 
ext to W. flavescens ; but it seems to me to be a typical 
Witupicn ea 
In n explanation of fig. 6 on pl. 2711, I might remark that I found 
the ovules of the two placentas of U. beccariana completely interlocked 
and sometimes so cemented together, that, except in very thin sections, 
the placentas would rathe e their base when I tried to 
separate them. The outer integument was always very conspicuous by 
its dark brown or almost black “colourin ng. 
oblongifolia, Stapf (sp. nov.). Frutea scandens, glaber ; rami 
— uniores subcompressi vel quadranguli, tandem teretes, ad nodos 
paululo nodosi, cortice fusco. Folia oblonga, subabrupte obtuseque 
in Jahrb. Hamburg. Wissensch. Anst. xvii. (1899) p. ‘145 (quoad 
spec. Beccar.) non Blume 
Borneo : Sarawak, Mount Matang, Beccari, 2272. 
U. oblongifolia differs from U. javanica in the leaves being larger 
