88 



QUEECUS, 



distinct; nerves 9 to 10 pairs, thin, but prominent beneath; length of blade 3 5 to 4-5 

 in., breadth 12 to 1*5 in.; petiole *25 in., thin. Spikes minutely cinereous-tomentose, 

 solitary and axillary, or in a short, rather dense, terminal panicle. Male flowers glomerulate ; 

 female flowers (fide De Candolle) at the base of some of the male spikes, ovoid. Fruit 

 unknown. —D C. Prod. xvi. ii. 105 ; sp. dub , Hook. fil. FL Br. Lid. v. 618. 



Lower Burma at Tavoy, — Wallich. 



This species is known only from Wallich's specimens, few of which have female 

 flowers, and none of which have fruit In foliage the specimens approach Caslanopsis 

 rhamnifolia, DC, to which species Kurz indeed referred them. 



Quercus gemelliflora, Bl. Batav. Verh. ix. 222. t. 6 ; Bljdr. 523 ; Flor. Jav. Cupul. 



30. t. 17 ; Mus. Bot. Lugd. Bat. i. 295 ; Miq. FL Ind. Bat. Suppl. i. 854 ; 

 Ann. Mus. Lugd. Bat. i. Ill; DC. Prod. xvi. ii. b8; Wenzig in Jahrb. 

 Bot. Gart. Bert. iv. 228. 



A species from the mountains of Western Java and of Sumatra, described and figured 

 by Blume as having narrowly lanceolate, acuminate leaves, serrate in the upper half, 

 entire and much attenuate towards the base, deciduously tomentose ; the cupules solitary, 

 or connate in pairs, hemispheric, with adpressed, ovate scales in the upper half (the 

 scales obsolete in the lower half), and an ovoid-conic glans much longer than the cupule. 

 The type specimens of this at Leiden (received from the Buitenzorg Herbarium) consist 

 of leaf-twigs only, with neither flowers nor fruit. M. De Candolle's specimen (received 



from Leiden) is no better. The leaves of g e?nel t iflora , as described and figured by 



Blume, are extremely like those of his Q. turbinate but the acorns of this are those of a 

 Pasania (turbinata, BL, being a Cyclobalanus). 



Quercus glutinosa, Bl. Mus. Lot. Lugd. Bat. i. 304; Miq. FL Ltd. Bat. i. 1. 86 i • 



Ann. Mus. Lugd. Bat. i. 118; DC. Prod. xvi. ii. 106. 



A species described by Blume from leaves only, and now represented in the Leiden 

 collection by a leaf-twig which Miquel suggests may be a sterile shoot of Q. induta. 

 M. De Candolle, however, considers this doubtful, and I quite agree with him. 



Quercus gracilis, Korth. Verh. Nat. Geseh. 207; Blume Mus. Bot. i. 300; DC. 



Prod. xvi. ii. 93 ; Miq. FL Ind. Bat. i. 861 ; Ann. Mus. Lugd. Bat. i. 113. 



Bornean specimens without fruit in the Leiden Herbarium form the material on which 

 this species was founded. I have seen nothing quite like them in any other collection 



No. 11472 ex Herb Hort. Bojror. in Signer Beccari's Herbarium. This species 



put into Cyclobalanus by M. De Candolle 



Quercus Jenkinsii, Benth., in Book. Ic. PL t. 1312, 3; sp. dub., Book, fil FL Br 



Ind. y. 618.— See remarks under Q. Listen, mihi. 



