190 NATURAL HISTORY OF PLANTS. 



in new branches or to leaves or bracts of the past year, solitary, 

 cymose or racemose-cymose.^ (All warm and temp, regions,^) 



6. Gironniera Gaudich.^— Flowers dioecious (nearly of Celtis), 

 4-5-merous ; sepals imbricate, persistent under the fruit, scarcely 

 accrescent. Stamens 4, 5 (in female flower 0) ; filaments incurved 

 inserted under pilose rudiment of gynsecium. Germen 1 -ovulate 

 (of Celtis) ; style branches sometimes free to base filiform elongately 

 subulate, densely papillose, not plumose. Fruit drupaceous com- 

 pressed-lenticular ; exocarp scarcely fleshy ; putamen crustaceous 

 brittle, sometimes rugose without. — Trees or shrubs unarmed 

 strigose ; leaves 2-stichous, entire or serrulate penninerved ; stipules 

 subintra-axillary free rather wide convolute, closely enfolding the 

 twig, afterwards caducous and after their fall leaving annular scars ; 

 flowers in loose or close sometimes spike-like cymes ; the male often 

 glomerulately spicate or densely crowded. {Trop. Asia, Malaya, 

 Pacific Islands,^), 



7. Trema Loue.^— Flowers (nearly of Celtis) polygamo-monoe- 

 cious; sepals 5, in aestivation induplicate-valvate below, more or 

 less imbricate above, in female flower generally unequal and oftener 

 quincuncially imbricate at base. Stamens 5, inserted under pilose 

 hypogynous disk ; filaments subulate ; anthers introrse. Germen 

 (in male flower rudimentary), ovule and other characters of Celtis ; 



' Subgenera in genus 4, ex. Pl. Prodr. scil. xviii. 193 {Momisia). — Bernh. Furnr. Fl. 



I. FucelHs {mcl.: Lotopsis Spach, Leiopyrena (1845), 871.— CAiiRiilfe;. ifo/-^. (1868), 300.— A. 



Spach, Froteophyllum Spach), stigmas entire Gray, Man. ed. 6, 443.— Chapm. Fl. S. Unit. St. 



linear, male flowers at base of leafless branches, 417.— Benth. Fl. Hongkong. 323 ; Fl. Austral. 



cymoso-racemose ; female flowers in axils of vi. 155. — Thw. Enum. Fl. Zeyl. 267.— Gren. et 



new leaves, solitary ; — 2. Sponioceltis (Pl.) Godr. Fl. de Fr. iii. 104. 



stigmas as in preced. flowers cymose ; cymes * Voy. JBonite, Bot. t. 85. — Pl. Ann. Sc. Nat. 



infer, male super, hermapbrod. — 3. Solenostigma ser. 3, x. 338 ; Frodr. xvii. 205.—Nematostigma 



(Endl.) : stigmas at apex 2-lobed or emar- Pl. loc. cit. 265 [Neniostigma).—Helminthospcr- 



ginate ; flowers cymose. — 4. Momisia (Dumort.) mum Thw. Hook. Journ. (1854), 302, t. 9, G. 



stigmas 2-fid or twice 2-fid; flowers cjnnose. ^ Spec. 5, 6. Wall. Cat. n. 7289 {Antidesma). 



" Spec. 73-75. L. Spec. iv. 1478.— Cav. Icon. — Bl. Mus. Lugd.-Bat. ii. 72.— Mia. PL Ind.- 



t. 294 (E/iamnus). —IjAMK. Diet. iii. 388 {Zizy- Pat. i. p. ii. 222.— Thw. Enum. Pl. Zeyl. 267.— 



phus). — W. Spec.— 994:. — Pers. Enchirid. Teysm. et Binn. Nat. Tijdschr. N. Ind. xi. 363 



229.— Ten. Ind. Sem. Hort. Neap. (1833), (xS??o;<m).— Benth. Fl. Hongkong. 324. — Seem. 



15.— PuRSH, Fl. Am. Sept. i. 200.— Rafin. Fl. FL Vit. 236. 



Ludov. 25.— RoxB. FL Ind. ii. 63.— Torr. Attn. ^ FL Cochinch. (ed. 1790), 562.— Bl. Mus. 



Lyc.N. Hist. (1827), 24.— Dcne. Jacquem. Voy. lugd,-bat. ii. 58.— Benth. FL AustraL vi. 157. 



Bot. 150, t. 152.— Blanco. Fl. d. Filip. ed. 1, —Sponia Commers. ex Lamk. Diet. iv. 138. — 



197 ; ed. 2, 139.— Sav. Prodr. 53 ; Fl. Ind.-Occ. Done. Herb, timor. 170.— Endl. Gen. n. 1852 



545.— H. B. K. Nov. Gen. et Spec. ii. 32.— Kl. (part.) — Pl. Ann. Sc. Nat. ser. 3, x. 264 ; 



Linnatty xx. 537. — Wedd. Ann. Sc. Nat. ser. 3, Prodr. xvii. 195. 



