DALBERGARIA. 101 
Prazer! Abdul Hug! Abdul Khalil! Tenasserim; Moulmein, Wallich! Cleghorn! Endine Ghor, 
Gallatly! Mergui, Helfer! Andamans; S. Andaman, Man! Heinig! 
Prate 85, Dalbergia volubilis Roxzb.—1, Flowering branch from Travancore, leaves 
young, ”.8.; 2, leaf from Chota Nagpur, full grown, n. s.; 3, bud x 4; 4, pedicel with 
basal and epicalycine bracteoles x 4; 5, calyx, laid open X4; 6, standard x 4; 7, wings 
X 4; 8, keel-petals x 4; 9, stamens, usual arrangement x 4; 10, stamens, occasional 
arrangement X 4; 11, ovary X 4; 12, ovary, laid open x 4; 13, ovule x 8; 14, twig in 
fruit from Tenasserim, л. s.; 15, pod opened, showing seed ¿4 situ, n, s, ; 16, seed, n. з. 
q 23. Stipulaceae. Pod semaroid, but more er less thickened opp: site the seeds ; 
style subulate; leaflets obtuse; climbers or casually erect shiubs ; bracts large, obtuse, 
A group composed of two very closely allied species which have, by Pentham and by Baker, in tho 
absence of fruits, been considered forms of one. An examination of the figures will, however, show the 
impossibility of this reduction. The group is, in some respects, nearly allied to D. tolubilis, but is 
nevertheless very distinct; its nearest ally is apparently D. Godefrcyi, an Indo-Chinese species which, 
on account of its pod, it is necessary to refer to the Reniformes. 
81. DALBERGIA FERRUGINEA Roxb, Hort. Beng. 98 (1814); Flor. Ind. iii. 228 (1822); 
Benth. Pl. Jungh. i. 256 (1851); Miq. Flor. Ind, Bat. i. 1, 133 (1855); 
Prain Journ. As. Soc. Beng. lxx. 2, 55 (1901); Volkens in Engl. Bot. 
Jahrb. xxxi. 464 (1901). | 
elliptica Span. Comp. Bot. Mag. i. 346 (1835); Linnaea xv. 197 (1841). 
lanceolata Zipp. ex Span. Linnaea xv. 197 (1841). 
lanceolaria Span. Linnsea xv. 197 (1841), not of Linn. f. 
luzonensis Vog. Nov. Act. Nat. Cur. xix. Suppl. i. 133 (1843); Benth. Journ, 
Linn. бос. iv. Suppl. 43 (1360). 
limonensis Benth. Pl. Jungh. i. 256 (1851). 
penduliflora Blume ex Miq. Flor. Ind. Bat. i. 1, 133 (1855). 
stipulacea Benth. Journ. Linn. бос. iv. Suppl. 48 partly (1860); Bak. in 
Hook. f. Flor. Brit. Ind. ii. 237 partly (1876); Nav. & Fernand. 
Vill. Nov. App. Flor. Philip. 67 (1880); Vidal Plant. Vase. F ilip. iii. 
(1886); Warb. in Engl. Bot. Jahrb. xiii. 329 (1891), not of Roxb. 
D. Zollingeriana Koord. Meded. 's lands Plantent. хіх. 431 (1898), not of Miq. 
Endespermum penduliflorum Zipp. ex Miq. Flor. Ind. Bat. i. 1, 133 (1855). 
S ° ° b 
SSS 
A straggling shrub or a climber, branchlets rusty-pubescent, sub-bifarious, recurved, 
pendulous. Leaves 4—8 in. long; leaflets usually 15—21, rarely as many as 25 on 
young shoots, very rarely 13, ovate-oblong, obtuse or emarginate, base rounded and 
slightly unequal, '75—1:25 in. long, "45--75 in. wide, firmly papery, sparsely ad pressed- 
strigose on both surfaces, ‘pubescence sometimes- persistent, leaflets sometimes at length 
quite glabrous, rachis 3—6'5 in. long, persistently puberulous as are the very short 
petiolules; stipules wide-obovate, obtuse, membranous, pubescent, very caducous. Flowers 
in small axillary panicles or in large terminal pseudo-panicles extending or not into 
the axils of the upper leaves, the end of the flowering branch becoming leafy, 
occasionally the leafy terminal portion abortive or obsolete, 8—12 in. long, 4- 6 in. 
wide, peduncles, branches and pedicels pubescent; main-bracts stipular, secondary similar 
but solitary, basal bracteoles cuneate or ovate-lenceolate, epicalycine ovate, all pubescent; 
