62 iv. ANONACE^. (Hook. f. & Thorns.) [Unona. 



5-9 by 2-4 in., usually broadest above the middle, red-brown beneath ; petiole ^ in. 

 Flowers pendulous; peduncles 1-2 in., slender, top subclavate ; bracts 1 or more, mi- 

 nute, basal. Petal* appressed-pubescent, young silky, keeled internally. Ovules 6-7. 

 Carpels moniliform, joints oblong. 



V AK. 1. Blumei; branches glabrous, leaves pale below glabrous or nearly so. U. 

 Alphonsii, Wall. Cat. 6426. 



VAR. 2. WaUichU; branches brown-tomentose, leaves glaucous and purple-tinged 

 below. Wall. Cat. 6241. 



10. FOLYALTHIA, Blume. 



Trees or shrubs; habit of Unona. Sepals 3, valvate or subimbricate. 

 Petals 6, 2-seriate, ovate or elongated, flat or the inner vaulted. Torn* con- 

 vex. Stamens cuneate ; anther-cells extrorse, remote. Ovaries indefinite ; 

 style usually obi on g ; ovnles 1-2, basal and erect, or subbasal and ascending. 

 Rif)e carpels 1-seeded, berried. DISTRIB. Tropical Asia and (1 sp.) Aus- 

 tralia ; species about 3<). Reduced to Unona by Baillon (Hist, des Mantes, 

 212) probably with good reason. 



SECT. I. TConoon, Mi^ud. Flowers hermaphrodite. Petals flat. Owk 

 solitary, basal, erect. 



a Flowers axillary or in the old leaf-axils or on woody tubercles. 

 * Petals linear. 



1. P. long-ifolia, Jit-nth. <( If. f. Gen. PL i. 25; branches glabrous, 

 leaves narrow lanceolate glabrous taper-pointed undulate, llo\vers sub- 

 umbelled, petals ?-l in. long. (Juatteria lun-ifolia, Wall. ('<tf. (M42 ; IT. <( .1. 

 Prodr. lo; Wiaht Ic. t. 1; //. /".<( /'. /'/. In>l. i:); Tlavait.x k'miHt. 10. 

 Uvaria longifolia, Lam.; /,'".//,. Fl. I ml. ii. 664. 



TANJOKE, Wight ; drier parts of CEYLON. Cultivated tbroughout the hotter parts of 

 India. 



A lofty tree; bram-hes slender. Leaves 5-8 by 1-2 in., membranous, base acute 

 rarely rounded, shining alx.ve, pellacid-dotted : ]> li >Ie \-\ in. Fim-crx iniiiiennis, di n-e, 

 yellow-green ; peduncles ^ in- ()I " ' ( ' ss > I'oary ; DdalOdlfl 1 '_' in., densely raceiuo-e, slend. r ; 

 iirurts minute, linear, l>a^al I'tttils nanow-linear. (.'nrjids | in., ovoid, obtuso at both 

 ends; stalk in., stout, glabrous. 



2. P. bifaria, Jienth. <( H. f. I.e.; young branches softly pubescent, 

 leaves lanceolate acuminate glabrous above downy ln-neatli, Howers solitary. 

 Giuitteria bifaria, .1. U(J. Mem. 41 ; Wall. Cat. 6447 ; //./. & T. Fl. Jn<l. 13ft 



PEGU, Wallich. 



A tree. Leaves 5 by 1 in., base acute, pellucid-dotted ; petiole in. Petals linear- 



laneeohite. (.'a f/n lx ovoid, long-stalked. Wallich's solitary speeimen is in llerli. Linn. 

 8oc. and is llcwerless. A. De Candolle describes it as ditVerin^ from P. cerasoitli-* only 

 in the linear petals. We suspect it to be a mixture of the flower of P. sitniaruin with 

 the foliage of P. cerasoides. 



3. P. coffeoides, LI- nth. & II. f. I.e. ; branches glabrous, leaves lanceo- 

 late or oblong-lanceolate taper-pointed undulate glabrous, flowers solitary, 

 petals l-l in. Beddome Ic. PI. ///'/. Or. i. 53. Guatteria cofieoides, 

 Thwaites Enum. 10; //./. & T. FL. Ind. 141. 



Forests of the WYNAAD, Beddome; and CEYLON, Thwaites. 



A tree; branches spreading. Leaves 4-7 by 1-2^ ^ n -> membranous, pellucid-dotted ; 

 petiole \ in. /'Tower* greeniBh-yellow, rarely on woody tubercles of the trunk; peduncles 

 |-14 iu., downy, articulate at the base, tieyals suborbicular. Petals broadly linear- 



