nfllZOPIIORACE.E. 297 



stamens, or even disappear altogether. In the internal angle of each 

 ovarian cell, there is a descending anatropons ovule with micropyle 

 superior and exterior. The fruit, surmounted hy the calyx or its 

 scar, is oblong, slightly fleshy or coriaceous, with smooth surface, or 

 traversed by longitudinal ribs, 1 and encloses a descending seed the 

 coats of which cover a fleshy macropodal embryo, with a superior 

 radicle, in the form of a thick club and with a gemmule formed of a 

 goodly number of small leaves in two vertical series. Anisophyllea, 

 of which seven or eight species 2 are known, consists of trees or 

 shrubs mostly from the tropical regions of the old world ; they have 

 been observed in India, Malaya, Madagascar, and tropical western 

 Africa. The leaves are alternate, distichous, without stipules, 

 alternately small and reduced to stipuliform tongues, and large, oval 

 or lanceolate, sometimes oblique at the base (giving them the form 

 of a parallelogram or trapezium), entire, coriaceous, in dried speci- 

 mens often presenting a yellow tinge, penninerved and regularly or 

 irregularly 3-7-nerved at the base. The flowers are axillary (fig. 

 275), small and disposed in simple spikes, with or without bracteoles. 



The different groups united in this small family should have been 

 placed far from each other, and they have been, in fact, when the 

 principles of A. L. de Jussieu have been strictly applied. The 

 Cassipourece known were, clearly, plants evidently epigynous, 

 while the true Rhizophoreœ and Carallia had an ovary in great 

 part inferior, with perigynous or epigynous stamens. It was E. 

 Brown, 3 who, in 1814, gave the name of RMzophora to a distinct 

 family, 1 before him referred to the Caprifolic.œ. In 1846 Lindley 5 

 placed the Cassipoureœ after the Loganîaceœ, although ha was 

 not ignorant of their affinities with the Mangroves pointed out 

 by K. Brown. Anisophyllea, on the other hand, has been considered 

 a neighbour of the Saxifragaceœ. Endlicher, nevertheless, in 1840, 



1 Tn Combretoearpus Motleyi Hook. f. {Gen. (Tetracrypta) ; Enum. Fl. Zeijl. 119. — Oliv. Fl. 

 683, n. 17). a small tree of Borneo, these ribs are Trop. Afr. ii. 412. — H. Bn. Adansonia, xi. 310. 

 more prominent and developed into three or four ■ — Walp. Ann. ii. 530 (Anisophyllum). 

 vertical wings, at, the same time the staminal 3 Flind. I'oy. ii. 549; Congo, 437. 

 filaments are narrower than in Animphyllea * Already in 1796, Saviony (Lumk. Diet. iv. 

 from which Combretoearpus is not perhaps gene- 690) had formed a distinct family under the 

 rically distinct. name of Palétuviers. 



2 Jack, Mai. Mi>c. ; Cole. Jour», iv. 336 5 Veg. Kimjd. 604. 

 (H,rl„rngis). — Mm. Fl. Ind.-JBat. i. p. i. 596 6 Gen. 1186 (Legiiotideo?). 

 [Anisophyllum). — Tnw. Hook. Journ.y. 378, t. 5 



