a A eg 
Schleichera. ] SAPINDACEA, 289 
X< Leaves ag = not lobed, with 3 basal nerv 
Leaves wound whitish beneath, the petiole 1-2 in. long cymes 
; brandlioks ts blackish » A, laurinum. 
Leaves a pastindren the a 3- = lin. longs ‘cymes panicled, 
—— 5 branchlets ts pale bro eve . A, levigatum. 
eaves 3-lobed ands 3-nerv 
Glabrous ; oes e leaves long, acuminate, entire - A. isolobum. 
eum, Bl. ; nd. Fl. i. 693. ee sieht (?) large 
tree, all Sat glabrous ; : leaves ovate to ovate-oblong, rounded or 
ob at base, on a long slender petiole, acuminate, entire, 
al 
coriaceous, whitish beneath; flowers sma , in racemose glabrous 
corymbs:; stamens 6 ; eamavan glabrous, the wings about 
long and somewhat spreading. 
Hap.—Frequent in the damp hill forests of the Martaban hills, east of 
Toonghoo, down to Tenasserim, at 4,600 to 6,000 ft. elevation.—s.—SS.—Metam 
2. A. laevigatum, Wall.—A tree, all parts glabrous; leaves 
ovate or oblong, rounded at the base, on a slender petiole 3-4 in. 
long, oes glabrous, one-coloured, 3-nerved at the base and — 
penninerved ; flowers small, cymose, forming glabrous panicles 
appearing with the young foliage ; carpels glabrous, 1-1} in. long, 
the wings veined, slightly diverging, dilated above, usually curved 
k. 
on the bac 
i re of Upper Tenasserim. 
isolobum, Kz.; H.f. Ind. Fl. i. 694.—An evergreen (?) 
ay aieehitrre ai all parts glabrous ; leaves eae 
8-lobed, 5-6 in. long and broad, rounded at the 3-nerved base, long 
petioled, glabrous, net-veined, the lobes spreading and acuminate ; 
cai and fruits unkno 
pean in the he damp hill forests of Martaban, at 5,000 to 7,000 ft. 
= reef —=Met 
SCHLEICHERA, Willd. 
Flowers regular, polygamously dioecious. Calyx inconspicuous, 
4-6-cleft, valvate, or Shesttrely co Be cate. Petalsnone. Disk com- 
plete, repand, glabrous. Stamens 6-8, very rarely 4-5, central; 
filaments elongate. Ovary 3-4-celled, with a solitary erect ovule in 
each cell. Fruit dry, almost erustaceous, stylose-acuminate, — 
celled. Seeds erect, ‘envelo a pulpy arillus.—Trees 
alternate abroply idee leaves. "Blowers mpsoaat savemneaes 
_‘Toughish, when old sek off in small pieces; cut dry, reddish ; 
eaves usually abruptly pinnate, while young puberulous, soon turn- 
aS ‘ing glabrous ; leaflets in 2-3 rarely 4 pairs, sometimes withs ant 
T 
