228 BURSERACEE. [ Soymida. | 
Has.—Frequent in the dry forests and entering also the upper mixed forests 
of Prome and Pegu; also Ava.—FIl. Sept.—l.—_SS.—CaS. SiS. (?) 
SOYMIDA, A. Juss. 
into unequally long wings.—Trees, with abruptly pinnate leaves. 
Flowers small, in axillary and terminal panicles. 
Hap —Found by Dr. Brandis somewhere in Burma, probably in Prome—F 
sometimes alternating with as many staminodes ; anthers versatile. 
5-celled, with 8-12 biseriate pendulous ovules in each cell ; 
style filiform. Capsule 5-celled, septicidally opening into valves, 
leaving the dissepiments attached to the persistent axis. ‘Seeds 
compressed, imbricate, winged below or on both ends.—Trees, with 
un 
x Leaflets entire (seeds winged at both ends). 
Leafiets usually on long slender petiolules ; calyx minute, the sepals 
rounded . ‘ ‘ as ‘ ge ae . C. Toond. 
Leaflets usually shortly petioluled ; calyx large, the sepals 14 lin. = 
r acute po, oS Ree 
ets serrate or serrulate ; calyx minute ; seeds winged ae 
only below . . . . ° . . a oS Cc. 2, 
1. C. Toona, Roxb.; Bedd. Fl. Sylv. t. 10; Brand. For. Fl.7 
t. 14.—Thit-kadoe.—A tree (30—100 + 40—50 + 6—12), 
