232 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Ardisitt. 



-erv numerous and approximate, sma!!, pink, smooth, inserted with 

 their snot? pedicels on a cylindric, thick, knobbed rachis. — Calycine 

 Iaciiviae oval, obtuse, ciliate — Berry smooth, globular; as large as a 

 .-corn, dask-purple. — N. W. 



16. }. lentiginosa, Bot. Keg. vii. 553. 



1 eaves lanceolate, crenate. Corymbs compound. Flowers mi- 

 cutelv dotted.— Edwards, 1. cit. 



A. crenulata, Bot. Cabin, i. 2. 



A. crenata, Bot. Mag. xlv. 1950, 



A. nana, Colebr. Mss. (according to a drawing preserved at tlia 

 Hon. Company's botauic garden at Calcutta.) 



A native of China; perhaps also of the Malayan peninsula and is. 

 lands, it Slaving been introduced into the botanic garden from Ma- 

 lacca in 1812, where it blossoms and successively ripens its fruit al- 

 most the whole year round. 



This elegant little dwarf shrub has been so well figured and des- 

 cribed, especially by Mr. Edwards, as to require no further notice? 

 here.— N. VV. 



3 7- A. kymenandra, Wall. 



Leaves obovate, acuminate, grossly crenate, tapering and entire 

 downwards. Corymbs lateral, leafy, with large biactes. Lacinice of 

 the corolla sub-liuear, very long. Anthers membrane-winged and 

 caudate, connate into a tube. 



Found on the Juntiyapoor mountains near Sillietby Mr. De Silva, 

 flowering in March. 



Seems to be a stout shrub. Branches remarkably thick, round, 



marked with many callous tubercles Leaves irregularly scattered, 



approximate, sub-verticillate in threes or fours, obovate, acuminate, 

 very large, measuring from six to ten inches or more in length, as 

 broad as a hand towards the extremity, and deeply gland-crenate ; 

 from thence gradually tapering down ward and nearly entire; base round- 

 ed or somewhat acute, very narrow, sub-decurrent ; smooth, dotted oq 



