HORTUS MALABARICUS. 



VOL. VI. 



Tab. 1. Poinciana pulcherrima. Lin. Caesalpiuia pulcherrima. 

 Willd. 



2. Caesalpinia Sappan. Lin. 



3. Pongamia glabra. Vent. Galedupa indica. Lam. Dal- 



bergia arborea. Willd. 



Pongam is Rheede's name for this plant, and Ventenat has observed, " J'aurois 

 du. peut-etre citer avec doubte le synonyme de Rheede, pareeque la Plante 

 qui est figur^e dans 1'Hortus Malabaricus, et qui est le type du genre Pon- 

 gamia, semble differer, surtout par la forme de ses fruits and de ses semences 

 du Pongamia glabra." Sir W. Jones, in the Asiatic Researches, vol. iv. p. 300, 

 has used Caranjaca for the generic name. 



4. Acacia Intsia. Willd. Mimosa Intsia. Lin. 



5. Acacia odoratissima of Willd. W. $ A. A. lomutocarpa. 



D C. Mimosa marginata. Lam. 



Quoted by De Candolle for his A. lomatocarpa, but he has queried whether the 

 flowers in this figure are not too loosely panicled, &c., and Wight and Arnott 

 appear to have decided rightly that his A . lomatocarpa and A. odoratissima 

 are the same. 



6. Ameloveenia spinosa. Denn. 



This may probably have no claim to constitute a separate genus, and Professor 

 Don considers it to be a Caesalpinea, although the leaves in the figure are not 

 bipinnate, and Rheede has described the flowers to be pentandrous. 



7. Erythrina indica. Lam, E. corallodendrum Var. orientalis. 



Lin. 



8. Caesalpinia mimusoides. Lam. 



9. 1 Cassia glauca. Lam. C. arborescens. Willd. C. sul- 



10. j phurea. D C. Senna arborescens. Roxb. 



C. arborescena of Martyn is quite different, and is a native of South America. 



11. Moringa pterogosperma. Gcert. Hyperanthera moringa. 



Willd. Guilandina moringa. Lin. 



12. Inga bigemina. Willd. Mimosa bigemina. Lin. 



