1903.] King & Gamble — Flora of the Malayan Peninsula. 195 



nerves 10 to 12 pairs, curved, spreading, very prominent beneath; length 

 •6 to '8 in. ; breadth 2'5 to 3*25 in. ; petioles "5 to '75 in. stout. Flowers 

 in pedunculate trichotomous axillary compound umbels, the common 

 peduncle 1 to 1"25 in. long, rusty-puberulous ; the secondary umbels on 

 short peduncles 6- to 8-flowered, with broadly ovate hirsute deciduous 

 bracteoles at their bases. Flowers "25 in. long, on rusty-pubescent pedicels 

 shorter than themselves. Calyx cupular ; its mouth truncate, undulate. 

 Corolla as long as the calyx ; its 4 lobes broad, blunt, puberulous out- 

 side, hirsute inside. Fruit unknown. 



Johor: Ridley 4084, 7441; Scortechini. Selangor: Ridley 7441, 

 7435,8540. Pahang: Ridley 11180. 



8. Urophyllum potatorum, King n. sp. A small tree; all parts 

 except the flowers glabrous; young branches thinner than a goose-quill, 

 terete, pale-brown when dry. Leaves coriaceous, 'elliptic-oblong, caudate- 

 acuminate, the base cuneate, both surfaces brown tinged Avith olivaceous 

 when dry, dull ; main-nerves 5 to 9 pairs prominent like the midrib on 

 the lower surface and depressed on the upper, veins faint on both ; 

 length 4 to 8 in.; breadth 125 tol"75 in.; petiole '2 to "25 in. stout ; 

 stipules ovate, much acuminate. Cymes axillary, longer than the petioles, 

 8- to 10-flowered. Floivers crowded, puberulous externally. Calyx 

 sessile, cylindric, the limb obscurely toothed, '2 in. long. Corolla longer 

 than the calyx ; the 4 lobes oblong, blunt, reflexed. Fruit unknown. 



Malacca: on Mount Ophir. Hullett 104; Wray 756. Perak : 

 King's Collector 3211. 



The flowers in the only three specimens which I have seen are in bad condition, 

 but they appear to be those of Urophyllum. According to Mr. Wray's field note, the 

 flower is whitish-green and the fruit is orange or yellow when ripe. Tlio leaves of 

 the .plant are used by the Malays to make a decoction which they drink as a beverage 

 that appears to have some of the physiological effects of tea. 



Note. — In addition to the foregoing species from the Malay Peninsula we take 

 this opportunity of describing the following very distinct species which lias hitherto 

 been collected only in the Andaman Islands. 



Urophyllum andamanicum, King & Gamble n. sp. Young branches brown, 

 thinner than a goose-quill, glabrons but for a very few scattered hairs near tho 

 nodes. Leaves oblanceolate, shortly and rather abruptly acuminate, narrowed from 

 above the middle to the short petiole; upper surface pale olivaceons when dry, 

 glabrous; the lower paler, glabrous, except the rust}' adpressed-pilose midrib and 

 nerves, transversely reticulate; main-nerves 10 to 12 pairs, ascending, very slightly 

 curved; length 5 to 7'5 in.; breadth 1*5 to 2'25 in.; petiole - 25 to '35 in. Stipules 

 lanceolate, much acuminate, densely rusty-pilose on the lower surface. Cymes 1 to 

 3 in a leaf-axile, on slender pedunclps much longer than the petioles, densely 

 umbellate, many-flowered, the flowers on coarsely rusty-pubescent pedicels, mostly 

 longer than themselves. Flowers '15 in. long. Calyx deeply cupular, pubescent 

 outside like the pedicels; tho mouth trnncate and usually entire, sometimes minutely 

 toothed. Corolla, twice as long as tho calyx, glabrous except the densely pilose 



