38 SISSOA. 
7. DALBERGIA RIMOSA Roxb. Hort. Beng. 53 (1814); DC. Prodr. ii. 417 (1825) ; 
Roxb. Flor. Ind. iii. 233 (1832); Wall. Cat. 5853 (1832); Wight Ic. t. 262 
(1840); Voigt Hort. Suburb. Caleutt. 241 (1845); Benth. Pl. Jungh. i. 255 
(1851); Journ. Linn. Soc. iv. Suppl. 32 (1860); Brandis For. Flor. 148 
(1874); Bak, in Hook. f. Flor. Brit. Ind. ii. 232 (1876); Prain Journ. 
As. бос. Beng. lxx. 2, 61 (1901), 
D. foliacea Wall. Cat. 5856 В in part (1832); Gamble Darjeel. List 29 
(1896), not of Roxb. 
Dalbergía sp. Drake del Castillo Journ. de Bot. v. 215 (1891). 
A scandent or subscandent shrub, occasionally erect and 20—95 ft. high, with many 
spreading branches. Leaves 4--8 іп, long; leaflets 5 —9, usually 7, ovate or obovate, 
elliptic, subacute or obtuse, mucronate, firmly papery, rather closely veined, bright-green, 
glabrous above, paler and puberulous beneath, 2—3 in. long, 1--2 in. wide; rachis 2:5 —5 
in. long, puberulous as are the short petiolules. 0078 minute, in terminal corymbose 
panicles of dichotomous cymes, sometimes extending into the axils of the uppermost 
leaves, 8—10 іп. long, 5—6 in. wide; bracteoles ovate-lanceolate, persistent, epicalycine pair 
hardly half as long as calyx-tube; calyx campanulate, 5-toothed, teeth obtuse except 
the rather longer lowest, the two upper subconnate; corolla white, petals short-clawed, 
especially the oblong emarginate standard ; s/amens 9, or sometimes 10, in a sheath split 
along the upper side; filaments free in their upper third, alternately shorter and longer; 
ovary shortly stipitate, puberulous; style short; ovules 1—2, Pod indehiscent, stipitate, 
oblong, glabrous, thickly coriaceous, veined everywhere, but very strongly so opposite the 1, 
rarely 2 seeds, 2—3 in. long, 75— 1:25 іп, wide, brown; seeds much compressed, reniform, 
"5 in. long, "25 in. wide, testa brown, somewhat shining. i 
HIMALAYA : Sikkim ; lower slopes and submontane forests of Terai and Duars, Hooker! 
King! Gambie! Prain! Gammie! Haines! Inpo-Cuiwa: Assam; Brahmaputra Valley, 
Jenkins! Simons! Mann! Masters! Peal! Silhet, Wallich! Clarke! Cachar, Prazer! Khasia, 
Hooker & Thomson! Grifith! Clarke! Mann! Gallatly! Naga Hills, Clarke! Watt! Burma; 
Kachin Hills, Mogaya, Shaik Muqim! CHINA: Yunnan; Szemao, Western Mts., 5,000 ft., 
a large climber; South-Western Mts., 4,500 ft., a rambling shrub, 8 feet high, Henry 
11887! 11952! Тохакіма: Black river, edge of a lake near Rochers de Notre Dame, a 
climber, Balansa! 
In Assam, according to Peal, this is known as Etam Sali or Atam Sali; the sali or bark is chewed. 
Рглте 11. Dalbergia rimosa Rozb.—1, Flowering branch, from Sikkim, n. s.; 
2, bud x 4; 8, pedicel with bracteoles x 4; 4, calyx, laid open X 4; 5, stecidard 
x 4; 6, wings x 4; 7, keel-petals x 4; 8, stamens x 4; 9, ovary Х 4; 10, ovary, 
opened x 4; 11, ovule x 10; 12, fruits, from Assam, л.в.; 18, pod opened, showing 
seed in situ, n. 5.; 14, seed, m. s. 
8. DALBERGIA Forgesi Prain Journ. As. Soc, Beng, lxx, 2, 61 (1901). 
D. parviflora Prain Journ. As. Soc. Beng, lxvi. 2, 191 partly (1897), not of 
Roxb. 
A moderately large climbing shrub, with glabrous branches. Leaves 5—7 in, long; 
leaflets usually 5, ovate, acuminate, base rounded, the terminal slightly the аа нЕ 
glabrous on both surfaces, closely finely reticulate, 1:3—3 25 іп, long, ‘75—1°6 in, wide: 
ы 7 
