164 G-. King — Materials for a Flora of the Malayan Peninsula. [No. 1, 



Flowers in large erect terminal panicles extending into the axils of the 

 upper leaves, 8-16 in. long, 6-8 in. across, composed of alternate crowded 

 corymbs 3-4 in. long, 2 in. across; lower pedicels 1 in. long solitary *n 

 axils of small lanceolate bracts 2 in. long, grey-pubescent as are the 

 branches and main rachis. Calyx 5-partite to base, segments distinctly 

 unequal, ovate-obtuse, greenish-yellow, downy externally, the larger *35 

 in. the smaller '% in. long. Petals 5 suborbicular, *75 in. long, "6 in. 

 wide, except the upper obcordate *6 in. long, *5 in. wide, all rather 

 pale uniform-yellow. Stamens 7 (the 3 upper reduced to staminodes) 

 the 3 lower with much larger anthers and longer filaments than the 

 2 lateral pairs. Pod nearly straight, flat, thin, slightly swollen opposite 

 the seeds, sutures faintly thickened, valves thickly coriaceous, sparsely 

 puberulous, 6-9 in. long, '5 in. wide, with a distinct stalk 5 in. long- 

 Seeds biseriate 20-30, oval, *3 in. long, *25 in. across, very thin, testa 

 dark-brown, shining. Bak. in Flor. Brit. Ind. II, 264. C jlorida Vahl. 

 Symb. Ill, 57 j DC. Prodr. II, 499 ; W. & A. Prodr. 288 ; Bedd. PL 

 Sylv. t. 179 ; Miq. Flor. Ind. Bat. I, 98. C. sumatrana Roxb. Hort. 

 Beng. 31; DC. Prodr. II, 506*; Wall. Cat. 5305. Senna zumatrana 

 Roxb. Flor. Ind. II, 347. 



Perak ; near Ulu Selangor, Kunstler 8668 1 Blanja, Wray 147 \ 

 Malacca ; Brian, Eolmberg 869 I Pahastg ; Pulo Rumpit, Ridley 2648 I 

 Distrif. India, Indo-China, Malay Archipelago. 



Mr. Wray gives the local name of this in Perak as Pako Nenmomg and notes that 

 the wood is stroug and tough. Mr. Holmberg gives the name in Malacca as Judl. 



§ 4. ChamjECRISTA DC. Sepals narrow ; stamens 5 or 10 all perfect 

 equal, or with the uppermost one smaller than the others and sometimes 

 replaced by a staminode. Pod dehiscent small strap-shaped, flat, the 

 seeds compressed parallel with the more or less oblique valves. 



13. Cassia mimosoides Linn. Sp. PI. 379. A low diffuse peren- 

 nial suberect or spreading, simple or much branched, glabrous or pubes- 

 cent, sometimes siiffrntescent 2-3 feet high; stem terete. Leaves 3- L 

 in. long, equally pinnate ; leaflets 40-60 pairs, linear with a distinct 

 oblique mucro, *1-'15 in. long, glabrous on both surfaces, rachis 

 puberulous with a small sessile gland on the petiole below the lowest 

 pair of leaflets, stipules finely subulate, straight, *2 in. long. Flowers 

 axillary, solitary or 2-3 together, pedicels unequal, ultimately 1 in. 

 long, bracteolate above the middle ; buds pointed narrow. Calyx 5- 

 partite to base, segments unequal linear-lanceolate to oblong-acute, 

 *25-3 in. long. Petals 5 subequal, elliptic or orbicular, shortly clawed, 

 obtuse, *35 in. long. Stamens 10 perfect, alternately longer and shorter. 

 Pod 2 in. Ion"-, *2 in. across, linear, flattish. Seeds 20-25, obliquely 

 rhomboid, compressed, testa dark-brown, shining. DC. Prodr. II, 503 j 



