102 AMERIMNON. 
calyx campanulate, lowest tooth lanceolate longer than tube, lateral acute, upper pair 
rounded subconnate; corolla white, petals all distinctly clawed, standard  orbicular, 
emarginate, often slightly cordate at base; stamens 10, in 2 lateral bundles of 5 each, 
filaments free in their upper third, alternately shorter and longer; ovary densely 
pubescent, distinctly stipitate; style slender, stigma minute; ovules 8—4. Рой 
indehiscent, glabrous except the stipe, with a thin but firm coriaceous margin, swollen 
but not corky, and reticulated opposite the seeds, narrowed abruptly below to a 
narrow flattened stipe, rounded at the apex with a slight apiculus, usually 1-seeded, 
but often 2- and sometimes 3-seeded and with a tendency to break off between the 
seeds, 1°25 in. long when 1-веейей, 2—2°5 in. long when 2—3-seeded, “75 in. wide; 
seed orbicular-reniform, :35 in. long, *3 in. wide. 
РнилрріхЕЗ: Luzon; Manila, Meyen! Vidal! Panay, Vidal! Novaliches, Loher! 
Montalban, Loher! Samar; Р. Jagor! Vidal! EASTERN Maraya: Borneo; Bangi Island 
at Pankalan, Fraser! Celebes; Minahassa, Koorders! Moluccas; Tidore, €. Smith! 
Теуғтала! Buru, Buitenzorg Collectors! Ceram, Teysmann! Foerster! Ceram Laut, Warburg! 
Timor, Spanoghe. Papuasia: New Guinea; Sigar, Warburg! Andai, Beccari! MICRONESIA : 
Carolines, Voelkens. 
Koorders gives the name of this in Celebes as Amoet-wost; Vidal gives it as Balhbagan in Panay, 
The writer has seen two original specimens of this species, named by Roxburgh himself. 
Prarg 86, Dalbergia ferruginea /7020.— 1, Specimen from Ceram, in flower, л. s. 2 
2, bud x 4; 8, pedicel with bracteoles X 4; 4, calyx х 4; 5, standard x 4; 0, wings 
X 4; Т, keel-petals x 4; 8, stamens X 4; 9, ovary х 4; 10, ovary, laid open x 4; 
11, ovule x 10; 12, specimen in fruit, from Tidore, n. ».; 18, l-seeded pod, laid open 
to show seed in situ, n. 8,; 14, seed, m. s. 
82. DALBERGIA STIPULACEA Roxb, Hort. Beng. 53 (1814); Flor. Ind. iii, 233 (1832); 
Wight Іс. t. 453 (1840); Voigt Hort, Suburb. Caleutt. 941 (1845); Benth. 
Pl. Jungh i. 256 (1851); Miq. Flor. Ind. Bat, i. 1, 133 (1855); Benth. 
Journ, Linn, Soc. iv. Suppl 47 (1860); Bak. in Hook f. Flor. Brit. Ind. 
iv. 297 in part (1876); Kurz. lor. Flor. Burm. i. 346 (1877); Gamble 
Darjeel. List 29 in part (1896); Prain Journ. As. Soc. Beng. lxvi. 2, 451 
(1897); Ixx. 2, 55 (1901); Bengal Plants i. 410 (1903). 
D. tingens Ham, in Wall. Cat, 5860 (1832). 
D. cassioides Wall. Cat. 5863 (1832). 
D. livida Grah. in Wall. Cat. 5866 (1832). 
D. cassinoides Miq. Flor. Ind. Bat.i, 1, 133 (1855), 
A small straggling tree with spreading branches, or a climber; young branches 
sub-bifarious, glabrous or puberulous; bark brownish, fibrous, Leaves 6—8 in. long; leaflets 
17—21, oblong to obovate-oblong, at first acute, ultimately obtuse or retuse at apex, 
cuneate or rounded at base, 1:25 in. long, '5 in. wide, on young shoots sometimes as 
much as 2:25 in. long and :85 in, wide, thinly papery, glabrous above dark-green, beneath 
sub-glaucescent and minutely adpressed-pubescent; rachis 5.—6'5 in. long, puberulous as 
аге the peticlules *15 in, long; stipules membranous, ovate-lanceolate, obtuse, caducous. 
Flowers in pseudo-terminal panicles rising among a cluster of scaly more or less deciduons 
bracts and ending in a new leafy branch; peduncles pubescent, beset with many scattered 
