144 G. King — Materials for a Flora of tTie Malayan Peninsula. [No. 1, 



grooved triangular glabrescent branches. Leaves 5-6 in. long, 1-foliolate ; 

 petiole 1 in. long 3 in. wide, with broad leafy reticulate- veined wings; 

 blade 4-5 in. long "75-1 in. wide, narrowly oblong-lanceolate with 

 rounded or subcordate base and acute apex, green and glabrous on both 

 surfaces, lateral nerves 15-20 pairs and secondary cross reticulate 

 venation distinct on both surfaces especially beneath; stipules very 

 large, *5-*75 in. long '2 in. wide, subscarious, closely parallel-veined 

 persistent, stipels small adnate to upper margin of petiolar wing. 

 In florescence in narrow axillary and terminal racemes 6-10 in. long, of 

 solitary or fascicled flowers in the axils of 20-40 simple scarious bracts 

 resembling foliar stipules with similar but much smaller stipulets at 

 their base ; pedicels ascending *2-*3 in. long. Calyx '15 in. long, very 

 sparsely hairy, bracteolate at base, bracteoles narrow scarious linear ; 

 tube campanulate, teeth unequal, upper deltoid lower linear. Corolla 

 purple, '3 in. long. Pod 1-2 in. long, joints 6-8, thin, *2 in. long, *25 in. 

 wide, densely persistently strigose with subadpressed greyish-brown 

 hairs. Bak. in Flor. Brit. Ind. II, 163 in part only, the synonyms D. 

 alatum, D. auriculatum and D. pseudo-triquetrum excluded. Hedysarum 

 triquetrum Linn. Sp. PI. 746. E. alatum Roxb. Flor. Ind. Ill, 348. 

 Pteroloma triquetrum Benth. PI. Jungh. 220 ; Miq. Flor. Ind. Bat. I, 

 258 excluding the synonyms Desmodium pseudo -triquetrum and D. 

 alatum. 



Andamans ; common in the interior of the Islands. Perak ; 

 Kunstler 1074 ! Scortechihi! Distrib. India and Indo- China. 



This species is very easily recognised by its hairy pods. Some difficulty is at 

 times found in separating flowering specimens of this from flowering specimens of 

 the next species ; the two are however quite distinct. Equally distinct are two other 

 species, D. alatum and D. pseudo -triquetrum, quite justly differentiated by De Can- 

 dolle but merged in D. triquetrum by Miquel, who has been followed in the Flora of 

 Brit. Ind. 



15. Desmodium auriculatum DO. Prodr. II, 326. A littoral shrub 

 with grooved triangular glabrescent branches. Leaves 4-5 in. long, 

 1-foliolate, petiole 1 in. long '3 in. wide, with broad leafy reticulate-veined 

 wings ; blade 3-4 in. long 1-1*5 in. wide, oblong or ovate-acute with 

 truncate or cordate base and acute apex, green and glabrous on both 

 surfaces, lateral nerves 10-12 pairs and secondary cross reticulate 

 venation distinct on both surfaces, especially beneath ; stipules large *5 

 in. long -2 in. wide, subscarious, closely parallel-veined, persistent, stipels 

 adnate to tip of petiolar wing. Inflorescence in axillary and terminal 

 racemes 5-8 in. long, of solitary or fascicled flowers in the axils of 12-20 

 simple scarious bracts ; pedicels ascending, *3 in. long. Calyx *15 

 in. long, sparsely hairy, base bracteolate ; tube campanulate shorter 

 than the unequal teeth. Corolla purple, *3 in. long. Pod 1-2 in. long, 



