448 URTICACES. [ Fieus. 
Has.—Rather rare in the dry forests of Prome district.—Fr. March.—l, 
—SS.—CaS. 
21. F. Rumphii, Bl. (7. cordifolia, Roxb.; Brand. For. Fl. 
416, t. 48).—Nyoung-hpyoo—A tree (50—60+ 15—20+6—8), 
shedding leaves in H.S., with a dense large crown, the stems usually 
root-netted, all parts quite glabrous; bark grey, rather smooth, 
minutely lenticellate, about 3 in. thick ; cut flesh-coloured, milky ; 
stipules long, linear-lanceolate, acuminate, glabrous ; leaves broadly 
cordate, with the base more or less truncate and often shortly nar- 
rowed at the joint of the 2-34 in. long petiole, gradually acuminate, 
4-7 in. long by 8-4 broad, more or less scalloped-waved, thin-coria- 
ceous, glabrous, opaque on both sides, minutely dotted on the upper 
side, 5-7-nerved at the base, the lateral nerves thin and arcuately 
uniting near the margin, without any or with very faint net-veination 
tween them ; receptacles sessile, usually by pairs in the axils of 
the leaves or above the scars of the fallen ones, globular, the size 
of a very small cherry, whitish, turning black when over-ripe, 
glabrous, bracted at the base, the bracts persistent, broad but small, 
glabrous. 
Has.—Common in the savannahs and lower mixed forests from Chittago: 
Ava, and Martaban down to Tenasserim; also entering the tidal forests.—*! . 
Jan.-March.—l1.—SS.— AI, 
Remazrks.— Wood pale-coloured, soft, and useless. 
22. F. caloneura, Kz.—Apparently a tree of the habit of the 
preceding, all parts elabrous ; leaves similar to those of F. Rumphii, 
cordate-ovate, gradually and bluntish acuminate, cordate at the base, 
on a 8-4 in. long petiole with 2 conspicuous glands at the jom 
apex, 4-5 in. long by 24-34 broad, coarsely and remotely repand- 
along the margin, the transverse net-veination elegant, but rather 
faint ; fruits unknown. 
Hazs.— Burma, without locality. 
23. F, religiosa, L. ; Bedd. Sylv. Madr., t. 314; Brand. For. | 
Fl., 415.—Nyoung-bau-di.—A_ leaf-shedding tree (50—60 + 15— = 
20+4—6), with a dense spreading crown, all parts quite glab- 
rous or the branchlets downy; bark rather smooth, ash-coloured ; 
stipules lanceolate, glabrous or pubescent ; leaves broadly ovate with — 
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