138 A REVISION OF THE INDIAN SPECIES OF LEEA. 
nearly org ae with age (as see Wight and Dalzell) ; petioles 
oft , stipules very large, say mare a tea sessile, 
mealy pubescent, large or sma y t+ in ., black, 
4-6-0 elled.—F rom a note in Herb. Wight, L. seaihiha ike, DG., 
was L. sambucina, Willd. 
50, 4s 1a, Wall. List. 6821; leaves lal nae with 5-8-1 
leafilets, joatlets saclate elliptic acute mea y white beneath from 
minute ‘clustered pubescence, lobes of the sain tube notched. 
Kurz For. Fl. i. 278, in Journ. As. Soc. 44, ii. 178.—L. macro- 
phyla, Laws., in Fl. Brit. Ind. i. 664, partly, “seh of Hornem. L. 
cinerea and coriacea, Laws., in Fl. Brit. Ind. i. 
Prome, Wallich. Concan, Stocks; Malabar, Palghat, Wight. 
Leaflets usually 8-5, the upper sessile, the lower shortly 
London and Calcutta does not amount to much. This plant has 
ery appearance of being the full form of L. macrophylla, oe : 
sispodt Prof. Lawson was right when he united it therewith. 
a 
lobes of its staminal tu ut I can make nothing definite out of 
that character. The ieteduition of the two species at once suggests 
- that one is merely a form of the other. de coriacea, Laws., 
merely the fruiting state of L. cinerea, Laws.; the difference in the 
mealy indumentum of the two (each fo fou pte) on a single fragment) 
toothing of the margin of the two. Prof. Lawson calle 
8-foliolate examples of L. latifolia (in Herb Wallich) LZ. macro- 
phylla, Roxb., and he placed the species of L. latifolia with L 
macrophylla Ait than with his L. cinerea and coriacea at the same 
time that he diagnosed L. macrophy ve as nee simple leaves. 
But — whole set is perhaps but one 
» Le. 6 Kurz in Journ. Bot t. 1875, 825; glabrous, 
lention 35 ‘putiolulate coriaceous ovate- oblong acute very large, 
corymbs stout short-peduncled. 
Nicobars, Katchall, et Distrib. “‘Tace and Trick,” fide 
Kurz in Journ. As. Soc 
A treelet, tical feet he Leaflets 11 by 44 in.; primary 
nerves 12 on e side the midrib 3 in. apart, crenations very 
shallow or fesigaiak often 2 or more for each primary nerve; 
petiolules 3 in. le 1 in. stout; co iam.; bracts 
and bracteoles early deciduous ; Rah rather larger than in the 
are re rry (ex Kurz) size of a Spe pea, lead- 
ure —Description copied main Z, 
nee ade 
. . 6. Samevcinz. Leaves 2-8-pinnate, glabrous or ve 
near. ae so; pr pind nerves not very close and parallel as in Sect. 
Pyenoneure. Trees and shrubs. 
17. ‘s ascites Kurz in Journ. As. Soc. 42, ii. 65; 44, 
