DESCKIl'TIVE CATALOGUE. 289 



The bitter kernels of the seeds are used as a remedy for malarial fevers; from which 

 fact the seeds are sometimes called " fever nuts." 

 Keferences: 



Guilandinn rristn (L. ) Small, Fl. Southeastern U. S. 591. 1904. 

 Caesalpinia crista L. Sp. PI. 1 : 380. 1753. 

 Guilandina bonduc L. Sp. PI. 1: 381. 1753. 

 Guilandinn honducella L. Sp. PI. ed. 2. 1 : 545. 1762. 



Guingambo (Porto Rico). See Abelmoschus esculentus. 



Gum and resin plants. 

 Acacia farnesiana. — Aromo; yields a gum like that of gum arabic, used by the 



natives as a nuu'ilage 

 Anacardium occidentale. — Kasue; yields "cashew gum," used as a varnish to 



guard against attacks of insects. 

 Artocarpus communis. — Breadfruit; yields a milky latex, used as a sizing for 



whitewash and a medium for mixing paint; becomes stiff on exposure to air, 



and is used for paying seams of canoes and troughs. 

 Calophyllum inophyllum. — Palo maria; the source of a resin, sometimes called 



tacamahac, soluble in spirits. 

 Ochrocarpus obovalis. — Chopag; yields a resin somewhat like that of the palo 



maria, to which it is closely related. 

 Ochrosia mariannensis. — Yellow-wood; yields a latex like rubber; not utilized 

 in Guam. 



Gulaman (Guam, Philippines). See Gracilaria confervoides, under Algas. 



Gulos (Guam). 



An unidentified tree. Leaves abruptly pinnate, the leaflets in two pairs, the ter- 

 minal pair much the larger; fruit eaten by bats {Pteropus kerandreni); seeds edible, 

 said to be somewhat like almonds. Tree common on the east coast near Pago. 



Gumbo (Louisiana). See Ahelmoschiis esculentus. 



Gumamela (Guam). See Hibiscus rosa-sinensis. 



Guttiferae. See Clusiaceae. 



Gynopogon torresianus. Maile. 



Family Apocynaceae. 

 Local name. — Nanago (Guam). 



A low glabrous evergreen shrub with aromatic, glossy leaves arranged in whorls 

 of three or four. Leaves elliptical or narrowly obovate, obtuse, subemarginate, cori- 

 aceous, tapering to the base, short-pet ioled or nearly sessile; flowers small, salver- 

 shaped, white, in axillary clusters with the peduncle exceeding the short petiole; 

 peduncle usually 2- flowered; calyx 5-parted; corolla tube cylindrical, slightly 

 swollen around the anthers and the throat usually somewhat dilated; lobes 5, 

 spreading, contorted in the bud, the throat without scales; stamens 5, inserted in 

 the tube, alternating with the corolla lobes; anthers erect, turned inwards, 2-celled, 

 inclosed in the tube; ovary of 2 distinct carpels, united by a single style; ovules few 

 in each carpel, in 2 rows; fruit an elliptical or nearly round drupe or berry. 



This species was collected in Guam by Gaudichaud, who obtained only imperfect 

 specimens of it. Leaves 24 to .36 mm. long, 10 to 20 mm. wide; lateral veins close 

 togethei, rather distinct; petioles 2 to 4 nnn. long. In specimens collected by the 

 writei many of the leaves were sessile. Common on rocky cliffs, especially on the 

 promontory between Asan and Tepungan, at the base of which the road passes 

 along the edge of the sea. The plant has the coumarin-like fragrance of the allied 

 species in Hawaii and Samoa, which are called maile or lau-maile by the natives of 

 those islands. In Hawaii Gynopogon ohvaeforme is highly esteemed. It is made 

 into garlands by the natives and its fragrance is celebrated in their songs. Its spe- 



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