Acacia. | LEGUMINOSE. 423 
5. A. ferruginea, DC. ; Brand. For. Fl. 185.—An evergreen (?) 
tree 20-30 ft. high, all parts glabrous, unarmed or more usually 
the branchlets armed with short glossy black stipulary prickles ; 
= by et lin. broad, 3-5-nerved at the base, pte 
glaucous green; flowers small, yellow, sessile, forming peduncled, 
linear-oblong, sessile or nearly so, with a thick samt ee 4-6 
in. long by 1 broad, flat, bluntish, opaque and laxly veined, brown ; 
seeds flat, es glossy. 
Has.—Burma, without locality (taken up on Beddome’s authority, who gives 
the Burmese name “ sitnet ” for it). 
* * Climbers. No stipulary prickles, but the branchlets 
along their whole length armed with recurved sharp 
prickles 
concinna, DC. ; Brand. For. Fl. 188.—Soo-pwot-nway.— 
with 
4-5 in. long, with 4-6 pairs of pimne, the rachis puberulous or 
almost glabrous, armed on the back with recurved prickles ; leaflets 
in 10-20 pairs, sessile, cea tassspmaaiaet re tia truncate at the 
broader base, blunt or blunti sh, up to } in. long, membranous, 
glabrous or nearly so; flowers” small, woitla; yellowish, in small 
heads of about 4 in. in diameter, borne on 1-13 in. long sparingly 
pubescent or densely F pheno rotnelas arising oolricry or by 
2 or 3 from the axils of the leaves or from above the scars of the 
oblong and occasionally constricted between the seeds, tapering at 
the base, blunt with a thick point, slightly torose, glabrous, slowly 
dehiscing ; ; seeds rather compressed, black. 
Help ces in the tropical and moister upper mixed forests all over 
Burma down $0 the e Andamans.—Fl. March-Apr.—Fr. C.S.—s: rer 
7. A, Intsia, Willd.—A large scandent shrub, the branches 
armed with numerous recurved, black, small but t sharp prickles, the 
branchlets more or less shortly rusty or tawny pubescent or tomen- 
tose; leaves abruptly bipinnate, 3-3 ft. long, with 4-8 pinne, the 
