256 G. King — Materials for a Flora of tlie Malayan Peninsula. [No. 1, 



forward, base obliquely rounded on lower margin, membranous, •Zh-'S 

 in. long, *1 in. wide, pale-green glabrous above, glaucous finely downy 

 beneath, the midrib very close to the upper margin ; stipules very large, 

 usually 1-1 "5 in. long, '4 in wide, obliquely cordate-acuminate, velvety- 

 pubescent beneath, puberulous above. Flowers in numerous heads 175 

 in. across, yellowish- white, the stamens often more or less flushed with 

 pink ; peduncles pubescent 1 '25 in. long, solitary or in fascicles of 2-4 

 on nodes in the upper half of pubescent racemose branchlets 3-5 in. 

 long, with large pubescent deciduous ovate-acuminate bracts '5 in. long, 

 the branchlets in panicles 8-12 in. long, 6-8 in. wide, at the ends of 

 leafy branches ; pedicels '05 in. long, pubescent. Calyx '1 in. long, 

 infundibuliform, teeth short acute, densely uniformly pubescent exter- 

 nally. Corolla *2 in. long, teeth lanceolate acute, half as long as tube 

 and like it densely-pubescent outside. Filaments connate at the base 

 in a yellowish tube longer than that of corolla, the free portion of 

 filaments yellowish with a pink flush, or white, '75 in. long. Pod inde- 

 hiscent 5-6 in. long, *75-l in. wide, thin, rigid, pale-brown, dull ; 

 valves faintly wide-reticulate. Seeds 8-10, ovate, "25 in. long, *2 in. 

 wide, much compressed, testa dark-brown, smooth, dull, not areolate. 

 Benth. in Hook. Lond. Journ. Bot. Ill, 92 ; Bedd. Fl. Sylvat. t. 55 ; 

 Miq. Flor. Ind. Bat. I, 28 ; Bak. in Flor. Brit. Ind. II, 300. Acacia 

 stipulata DC. Prodr. II, 469; Wall. Cat. 5326; W. & A. Prodr. 

 274. A. Smithiana Wall. Cat. 5237. A. marginata Ham. in Wall. 

 Cat. 5243. Mimosa Smithiana Roxb. Hort. Beng. 40; Fl. Ind. II, 

 550. M. stipulata Roxb. Hort. Beng. 40. M. stipulacea Roxb. Fl. Ind. 

 II, 549. Arthrosprion stipulatum Hassk. Refczia I, 212. The Wmifi 

 Sibis. 



An damans ; rare, E. H. Man ! Nicobars ; Kamorta, common, Kurz ! 

 Distrte. Throughout South-Eastern Asia. 



This was once found by Mr. Man in the forests of South Andaman many years 

 ago ; none of the numerous collections made in the group daring recent years contain 

 any specimens of the species. It becomes quite common again in the Nicobars and 

 in the Malay Archipelago it seems to be as plentiful as it is in India and Indo- 

 China. But from the intervening Malay Peninsula no collector has ever sent a 

 specimen to Calcutta. 



Miquel describes three varieties : — 



(a.) typica with greenish stamens. 



(/3.) vegeta with pinkish stamens. 



(7.) stipulis persistentibus with permanent, more pubescent stipules. 



But his varieties (£.) and (7.) are only forms of one tree and that tree is what 

 constitutes in reality typical A. stipulata. What Miquel treats as vae. typica is 

 Roxburgh's Mimosa Smithiana, which has small stipules, and is, if not a distinct 

 species, certainly a very good variety. The Andamans and Nicobars tree is true 

 A, stipulata; the other form has not been met with in our area. 



