50 G. King — Materials for a Flora of the Malayan Peninsula. [No. I, 



rarely suberect with stems 1-2 feet high. Leaves usually 4-5 in. long*; 

 leaflets 3 membranous sparsely adpressed-pubescent on both surfaces, 

 ovate to lanceolate, acute or shortly acuminate, entire or faintly repand 

 rarely slightly lobed, base of terminal leaflet cuneate of lateral truncate 

 or snbauriculately lobed to outer side, 2-4 in. long, 1-2*5 in. wide; 

 petioles 2-4 in. long, pubescent with spreading or slightly reversed hairs, 

 petiolules '15 in. long, pubescent, stipels '15 in. long, glabrous lanceo- 

 late, stipules *2-25 in. long, lanceolate glabrescent. Racemes subspicate 

 •75-1 '5 in. long, at end of stoutish peduncles 5-8 in. long, pubescent 

 with at first decidedly reflexed hairs ; flowers 2-3 together from 6-8 

 nodes at length '2 in. apart, lower pedicels at length '2 in. long, bracts 

 lanceolate '25 in. long fixed above the base. Calyx *15 in. long teeth 

 short deltoid, bracteoles narrowly lanceolate '2 in. long. Corolla yellow 

 5-75 in. long, glabrous. Pod 25-3 in. long '2 in. wide, recurved 

 glabrous ; seeds 10-12 subtruncate at ends with prominent hilum half 

 as long as seed. 



Var. typica ; stems pubescent. Roxb. Flor. Ind. Ill, 289 ; Wall. 

 Cat. 5611; W. & A. Prodr. 245; Bak. in Flor. Brit. Ind. II, 203. 

 P. hirtus Wall. Cat. 5593 not of Retz. P. sublobatus Wall. Cat. 5598 

 not of Roxb. P. pubescens Blume Cat. Bog. 94 ; Miq. Flor. Ind. Bat. 

 I, 200. 



Perak ; Batu Kuran, common, Scort echini ! Curtis 29S4 ! Anda- 

 mans ; common, cultivated and as an escape. Distrib. S.-E. Asia and 

 Malaya. 



Var. gracilis; stems slender, glabrous. 



Perak ; Larut, Scortechini 1476 ! Wray 1756 ! Goping, Kunstler 

 990! Durian, Kunstler 1035! 2467! Pahang; at Pekan, Ridley 1124! 

 Distiub. Sumatra (Forbes). 



But for the more slender and glabrous stems there is no character to separate 

 var. gracilis from P. cdlcaratus which is otherwise a sufficiently variable species. 

 Except that it is described as having subtorulose pods even when old, the writer 

 would have no hesitation in referring P. luteus Bl. to var. gracilis. As a matter 

 of fact the pods of all the varieties of /'. calcaratus are subtorulose when young, 

 and in Roxburgh's P. torosus, which is referable to P. calcaratus, they continue so ; 

 but, not having seen specimens, the writer does not feel justified in formally 

 reducing Blume's plant, and would leave the matter to be settled by the botanists 

 of the Dutch Indies. 



5. Phaseolus Mungo Linn. Mantiss. I, 101. A spreading annual 

 or perennial with slender annual pubescent steins 6-10 feet long, grow- 

 ing in open grassy places (Kunstler). Leaves 8-10 in. long ; leaflets 3 

 blueisii-green membranous ovate-acute, base wide-truncate — of lateral 

 leaflets oblique, sparsely pubescent on both surfaces, 3-5 in. long, 2*5-4 

 in, wide, petioles 5 in. long sparsely pubescent with spreading hairs, 



