388 G. King — Materials for a Flora of the Malayan Peninsula. [No. 3, 



glabrous or nearly so ; the lower surface woolly on the nerves and with 

 scattered hairs between, often glabrescent when old ; main nerves 6 or 

 7 pairs, spreading, the lower one or two pairs much curved and branch- 

 ing outwards; length 6 to 10 in., breadth 4'5 to 9 in.; petiole 2*5 to 6 

 in., with pubescence like the young branches, becoming glabrous with 

 age. Inflorescence thyrsoid, sericeous- torn entose, 4 to 6 in. long, on an 

 equally long peduncle bearing a long once or twice dichotomous tendril 

 clothed with wool and bristles. Flowers 4-merous, on short pedicels. 

 Calyx cupular, glabrous like the separating petals. Berry pedicelled, 

 globular, "3 in, in diam., smooth, with scanty pulp and 3 or 4 com- 

 pressed plano-convex shining seeds grooved on the plane surface and 

 slightly rugalose on the convex. Wall. Cat. 5997, 5995 C. and D ; 

 Lawson in Hook. fil. Fl. Br. Ind. I, 651 in part ; Kurz For. Flora Bur- 

 ma, I, 276. Ampelocissus harhata, Planch, in DC. Mon. Phan. V, 372. 

 F. lanata Laws, (not of Boxb.) Fl. Br. Ind. I, 651, in part. 



Andamans : King's Collectors. Distrib. Burma, Sylhet, Assam, 

 and the base of the Eastern Himalaya. 



Var. trilohataj leaves 3-lobed, pubescence rufous. 



Perak : King's Collector, No. 1768. Distrib. Siam, Timor. 



This species is distinguished by the mixture of soft pale hairs and 

 dark subulate bristles with which the young stems petioles and ten- 

 drils are covered. The species is really an excellent one; but it has 

 been misunderstood owing I believe mainly to a mistake of Wallich 

 its author who issued, under the name V. harhata, specimens which 

 bore the same number (5994) as his species V. rugosa, and which really 

 belong to V. rugosa. As a rule the pubescence of F. harhata is pale 

 brown, and not rufescent. But in the Perak specimens the pubescence 

 is pale ferrugineous, and the leaves moreover are alightly three-lobed. 

 In other respects the Perak plant agrees with specimens from Burma, 

 the Andamans and Sylhet. F. rugosa, to which this species is un- 

 doubtedly allied, appears however to be quite different. It has not the 

 characteristic bristles of F. harhata, and its pubescence is always ru- 

 fescent. F. rugosa has really little affinity with F. lanata, Roxb. to 

 which it has been reduced by Lawson and others. 



2. ViTis MACROSTACHTA, Miq. in Ann. Mus. Lugd. Bat. I, 94. All 

 parts quite glabrous; branches slender, sub-compressed, angled, not 

 winged. Leaves coriaceous, shining, broadly ovate or oblong, shortly and 

 abruptly acuminate, the edges with a few distant short exserted spinous 

 teeth, the base rounded, the reticulations minute and distinct on both 

 surfaces ^vhen dry ; main nerves 5 or 6 pairs, spreading ; length 3 to 

 6 in., breadth 2 to 325 in., petioles 1'2 to 1'8 in. Spikes very narrow, 

 much longer than the leaves, often in lax panicles, pendulous. Flowers 



