So THE FLORA OF SINGAPORE. 
gram _trifoliatum Vent, I have found fruits of this float- 
ing in the sea near Singapore. 
C. sundaicum Miq. Climber, flowers green, Changi, Chan Chu 
Kang. < , 
Illigera appendiculata Bl. Climber, rare, Bukit Timah. 
MYRTACEX. 
кш leucadendron L. * Gelam.” Wild at Tanah Merah, 
hangi. Kampong Gelam = perhaps take its name 
fron trees formerly growing here. 
Tristania го Griff. in Cantor's Plants. Journ. As. Soc 
Be xxii. p. 623. T. Wightiana e Mss acidi 
ing to b Flor. Brit. India, but Griffith named it after a 
clergyman of the name of White. “ Pise an.” А tree 
40 feet tall with red bark which flakes off uid lies in piles 
at the foot of the tree: flowers hue, foetid. Sandy 
spots near the sea, Bajau, Pulau Ubin 
T. sp. flowers small white, leaves more coriaceous. Woods, 
Bukit Timah, Bukit Man dai 
T. Merguensis Griff. Sungei Morai. 
(T. rufescens Pierre. A shrub much resembling Sideroxylon 
ferrugineum, apparently this Cochin Chinese pue occurs 
on cliffs of the island Pulau Battam, South of Singapore.) 
Rhodamnia ee va Bl. A medium-sized tree with white flowers, 
white as Hawthorn when in flower; berries r 
нае eek: Very common all-over Singapore. The 
var. concolor with leaves green on both surfaces grows in 
shady places ; var. spectabilis with the backs of the leaves 
silvery is common in open country, but the two varieties 
pass into each other and are often ташын galak 
Rhodomyrtus sree Wight. “Kamunting.” A bush with — 
telove fruits plum- colored, eatable. Abun- 
dant in sary spots. Mt. Faber, Blakang Mati, Changi. 
