1S76.] Knoioleclge of the Burmese Flora. 265 



grass-lands and along grassy borders of the fields in the Pegu plains. — Fl. 

 Fr. CS. 



N. B. G. patula, Grah. (in Wall. Cat. 5371 ; Bth. in Hook. Lond. 

 Journ. II. 568, from Ava), is reduced by Baker to a variety of G. nana, 

 Burm. I am unacquainted with the species. 



9. C. calycina, Schrank. PI. rar. Monac. t. 12 ; Hf. Ind. Fl. II. 72. 

 (G. striata, Boxb. Fl. Ind. III. 265, non Roth.). 



Hab. Ava, Irrawaddi- valley near Tagoung (J. Anderson) ; Taong- 

 dong (Wall.).— Fl. Fr. Jan. 



10. C. DUBiA, Grah. in Wall. Cat. 5404 ; Hf . Ind. Fl. II. 73. 

 Hab. Frequent in the upper mixed forests, but chiefly in poonzohs, 



of Chittagong, Pegu., and Martaban, up to 3000 feet elevation. — Fl. Fr. CS. 



11. C. Chinensis, L. sp. pi. 1003, non Boxb. ; Hf. Ind. Fl. II. 73. 

 (G larbata, Miq. Fl. Ind. Bat. I. 338, non Grah.). 



Hab. Pegu and Tenasserim (teste Baker). 



12. C. sessiliploea, L. sp. pi. 1004 ; Hf . Ind. Fl. II. 73. 



Hab. Common in jungle-pastures and in open places of the open and 

 dry forests, all over Burma, from Chittagong and Ava down to Tenasserim. 

 Fl. Fr. Close of E. and CS. 



13. C. Kubzii, Bak. in Journ. As. Soc. Beng. 1873. 229 ; Hf. Ind. 

 Fl. II. 75. 



Var. a. GEircnsrA, Leaves longer and of a thinner texture ; flowers 

 usually axillary and gradually passing into terminal or axillary racemes with 

 all intermediate conditions on the same plant ; pods an inch long. 

 Low-level form. 



Var. (3. Montana, leaves of a firmer texture and half the size ; 

 flowers in true leafless elongate axillary and terminal racemes ; pods 

 only -| an inch long. High-level form. 



Hab. Var. a. common in the upper, rare in the lower mixed forests, 

 all over the Pegu Yomah and Martaban ; var. /?. pretty frequent in the 

 drier hill- (especially the pine-) forests of Martaban, up to 5000 feet eleva- 

 tion.— Fl. CS. ; Fr. HS. 



G. Peguana, Bth. MS. (Hf. Ind. Fl. II. 77, from Eangoon), is un- 

 known to me. It seems to me to differ in no respect from the axillary- 

 flowered form of the above. 



14. C. Assamica, Bth. in Hook. Lond. Journ. Bot. II. 481 ; Hf. 

 Ind. Fl. II. 75. 



Hab. Ava, in the Khakyen hills, east of Bhamo (J.Anderson). — Fl. 

 Fr. March. 



In Ava specimens the flowers sometimes grow indifferently in the place 

 of the leaves from the leaf -branches, so that the flowers are either mixed 

 up with the leaves (reduced flowering branchlets) or form incomplete ra- 



