HORT. MAL.VOL. III. 11 



Tab. 29. Annona squamosa. Lin. 



30, 

 31, 



30 7 



' > Annona rcticulata. Lin. 



A.reticulata, in the Species PI an tar urn, is described to be a native of America, 

 and a reference to Rheede has been added in the Systema Naturae. I have 

 only seen a Jamaica plant, which differed considerably from these figures, but 

 they have been quoted by almost every author for A.reticulata, and the dif- 

 ference may perhaps be attributed to the growth in a different climate. 



32. Artocarpus hirsuta. Lam. A. pubescens. Willd. 



33. Nauclea Cadamba. Roxb. N. citrifolia. Poiret. 



Quoted by Linnaeus, Gocrtncr, and most other authors, for N. orientalis, with 

 which this species appears to have been formerly confounded ; and in the 

 Hortus Britannicus it is quoted both for N. orientalis and for N. Cadamba. 

 It is considered by Wight and Arnott to be N. purpurea, rather than N. Ca- 

 damba of Roxburgh ; but Rheede has described the flower to be yellow. 



34. Psidium pyriferum. Lin. 



Dr. Hamilton says that tab. 34 and 35 belong to the same species, and I have seen 

 West India plants of P. pyriferum or pomiferum, with the fruit of an inter- 

 mediate shape. 



35. Psidium pomiferum. Lin. 



36. Careya arborea. Roxb. 



Quoted by Dennstedt for the Psidium montanum of Swartz. 



37. AegleMarmelosofCorrea. Roxb. Crataeva Marmelos. Lin. 



OO 'J 



*> Dillenia indica. Lin. D.integra of Thunberg. 



'>t' y 



Most authors have followed Thunberg, who has quoted these figures (theSyalita 

 of Rheede) together with D. indica of Linnaeus for his D. spedosa, but Rheede 

 has represented the leaves to be nearly entire, and this plant has altogether 

 more affinity with the D. integra of Thunberg. Linnaeus first constituted the 

 species in the Hortus Cliffortianus, where there is no mention of any Ser- 

 ratures, and all his references are either directly to, or belong to, the Syalita; 

 but to these Synonyms, in the Species Plantarum, he has added the Songium 

 of Rumphius, which much resembles the D. spedosa, and this may have led to 

 the long continuance of the error in considering the D. indica and D. spedosa 

 to be the same. The Songium is, however, quoted for a separate species, 

 with the name of D. elKptica, by Thunberg. There is no specimen of D. indica 

 in the Linnean Herbarium, and all the specimens that I have seen of D. spedosa 

 accord with Roxburgh's Description in having the leaves 'most regularly 

 sharp-serrate.' 



40. SonneratiaacidaofLin. Sup. Willd. Rhizophora caseolaris. 



Lin. Sp. Plant. 



41. Diospyros Embryopteris. Persoon. D. glutinosa. Roxb. 



Garcinia malabarica. Desrousseux. 



It is D. glutinosa of the Flora Indica; but Roxburgh, in his Plants of Coro- 

 mandel, has described it with the name of Embryopteris glutinifera, and in 

 Don's Dictionary the species is erroneously called E, yelatinifera. The leaves, 



