434 D. Prain — Some additional Leguminosae. [No. 2, 



ii. 216. Atylosia glandulosa Valz. in Journ. Linn. Soc. xiii. 185. Cajanus 

 glandulosus Dalz. 8f Gibs. Bomb. Flora, 73. 



Concan ; Stocks! Gentral India; Godavery jangles, Beddome ! 

 Sagor, Jerdon ! Bengal ; Mymensingh, Clarke 7800 ! Burma ; South 

 Shan States at Lwekaw, King's Collectors ! 



There is no doubt that this is a Dunbaria but it is not, as Mr. Kurz was inclined 

 to think, the same as the preceding. Mr. Baker's description is very good, but it does 

 not mention the distinct callosities on the vexillum which mark it unmistakeably as 

 a Dunbaria; the fact has been overlooked that it was already a described species. 

 The name Atylosia glandulosa, under which it is described by Dalzell, has been cited 

 in the Flora of British India as a synonym of Atylosia mollis. Dalzell's description 

 of the species, however, calls attention to the calli on the vexillum, the bulbous- 

 based hairs on the pods and the retrofracted solitary pedicels, whereas neither in 

 A. mollis, nor in the species A. crassa which is mixed with A. mollis, do we find long 

 hairs on the pods, neither have calli on the vexillum, neither have retrofracted 

 pedicels ; finally, in both the pedicels are geminate. 



3c. Dunbaria fusca Kurz in Journ. As. Soc. Beng. xliii. 2. 186 ; 

 xlv. 2. 255. Phaseolus fuscns Wall. PL As. Uar. i. t. 6 ; Cat. 5613 ; Bth. 

 8f H.f. Gen. PI. i. 539 ; Bak. in Flor. Brit Ind. ii. 204. 



This species has been already referred to under Phaseolus. 



In the Genera Plantarum the figure of this species is — obviously by oversight, 

 for its pod is flat not terete, and its valves thin not thick, — quoted as that of a 

 Phaseolus § Dysolobium. 



It is not a Phaseolus at all ; its style is glabrous, not bearded, its stigma capitate 

 not oblique ; the keel though beaked and with the beak moreover hooked, is not 

 deflexed ; more important still, the rachis is not nodif orm. Finally the leaves are 

 glandular beneath and though Dr. Wallich describes the leaves as having small 

 deciduous stipels he figures none, and none of his specimens have any. But apart 

 from the character of stipels the plant is certainly, as Kurz has pointed out, a Dun- 

 baria ; the mere presence of stipels has not been held by Mr. Bentham sufficient 

 to outweigh all the other characters that go to distinguish the Cajaneae — the 

 subtribe to which Dunbaria belongs. 



3d. Dunbaria bella Prain ; stems glabrescent, stipules caducous, 

 leaflets subcoriaceous, shortly hispid especially on the nerves above, 

 trinerved and distinctly reticulate- veined, softly pubescent beneath, 

 lanceolate-acute three times as long as broad, flowers in peduncled lax 

 racemes, calyx-teeth short, corolla much exserted, pod recurved velvety 

 8-JO-seeded. 



Burma ; Southern Shan States at Lwekaw, King's Collectors ! 

 Tenasserim, Gallatly ! 



A woody climber. Branches firm terete at first sparsely puberulous. Petiole 

 1'5 in., stipels ; leaflets 35 in. long, 1-1*25 in. wide, petiolules very short. Racemes 

 overtopping the leaves, flowers rather smaller than, but as showy as in D. rostrata ; 

 pedicels *5-7 in. Calyx - 35 in., broadly campanulate, glabrescent, all the teeth 

 shorter than the tube. Corolla 6 in. long, keel broad-beaked j standard "75 in. across, 



