412 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Igea. 



seven inches long, and frpm two to three broad. — Petioles and peti- 

 efets round, smooth. — Stipules large, adjoined to the lower part of 

 the petiole, coloured, leathery, falling.— Cymes terminal, large, with 

 frequently a smaller one accompanying the chief one. — Flowers small 

 greenish white, very numerous. — Caylx cup-shaped, five-toothed, 

 permanent, — Corol one-petalled.- Tube a little longer than the calyx. 

 Border five-parted ; divisions oblong, concave, with an incurved 

 point. — Nectary a yellow, fleshy, five-cleft ring, inserted into the 

 mouth of the tube of the corol, descending with a contracted rim 

 considerably into it, and rising about it; divisions emarginate.— .F/,. 

 laments five, inserted into the outside of the nectary, just below, or 

 rather in the lower sloping edge of its fissures. — Anthers oblong, in- 

 verted within the nectary, their sides adhering to each other as in 

 the plants of Syngenesia. — Germ superior, globular. Style the length 

 of Jthe tube of the corol.— Stigma simple — Berry dry, size of a small 

 cherry, flattened, five- or six-grooved, five- or six-celled.— Seeds one 

 in each cell, 



7. L. integrifolia, R. 



Sub-arboreous. Leaves super-decompound ; leaflets Ianceolar, en» 

 tire, acuminate. Corymbs super-decompound. 



Teling. Bcoradipakai. 



A native of the moist vallies among the Circar mountains. It is a 

 large shrub, and flowers during the wet season. 



Leaves alternate, super-decompound, about thirty inches long. — 

 Tinnaasm the last species; the lower pair always bipiiinate. — Leaflets 

 opposite, sub-sessile, linear-lanceolate and lanceolar, sometimes very 

 slightly serrate ; smooth above, a little downj underneath, from six to 

 eight inches long, and from two to three broad. — Petioles and petit 

 olets smooth, with an elevated ridge running along the upper side; 

 beyond the lower pair of pinnee the ridge has a groove in it. — Stir 

 pules as in the former. — Corymbs terminal, &,c. as in the last species, 

 but larger. — Calyx as in the other species.— Corol; tube shorter than 

 the calyx, in other respects as in the last species. — Nectary composed 



