1896.] G. King — Materials for a Flora of the Malayan Peninsula. 509 



terminal, stoutly pedunculate, rusty-tomentose, those with female flowers 

 longer than the leaves, those with males shorter ; the branches of both 

 short, ascending, those of the male more numerous. Maze flowers '1 

 in. in diam., much crowded in short sub-globular sessile cvmose 

 fascicles; calyx cupular, flat, with 5 spreading broad triangular acute 

 teeth, pubescent outside ; petals 5, longer than the sepals, broadly 

 elliptic, acute, glabrescent. Stamens 5, the filaments longer than the 

 petals ; disc broad, convex, fleshy, hairy in the middle ; ovary none. 

 Female flowers less numerous than the males and twice as large: 

 calyx rusty-tomentose and petals pubescent outside ; petals acute. 

 Stamens with very small anthers. Ovary obliquely hemispherical, 

 slightly compressed, densely rusty-tomentose : styles 3, short, horizon- 

 tally radiating, pubescent ; stigmas truncate. Drupe transversely oblong, 

 •35 in. from base to apex and *6 in. from side to side, compressed, 

 sparsely toinentose, the enlarged peduncle about one-third of its length, 

 thin, cup-shaped, sparsely -pubescent. 



Perak : King's Collector, Nos. 7439, 7622 and 7655. 



Allied to 8. Anacardium, Linn, fil., but well distinct from that and 

 from any other hitherto described species. 



2. Semecakpus OuRTl&n, King n. sp. A small tree : young 

 branches stout, their bark pale. Leaves coriaceous, oblanceolate-oblong, 

 shortly and bluntly acuminate, the edges slightly undulate, gradually 

 narrowed from the upper third to the stout petiole, upper surface 

 shining - , greenish when dry, reticulate ; the lower dull, pale from very 

 minute scales ; main nerves 38 to 20 in., spreading and interarching 

 within the pale cartilaginous edge, very prominent and pale on the - 

 lower surface, faint on the upper ; length 33 to 16 in,, breadth 4 to 5 

 in. ; petiole 1*5 to 2 in., very stout. Panicles much shorter than the 

 leaves, branching from near the base ; the branches ascending, angled, 

 tawny-puberulous, the ultimate branchlets cymose. Flowers, unisexual 

 and the sexes on different panicles, shortly pedicelled. Male flowers 

 •15 in. in diam. ; calyx cupular, with 5 ovate sub-acute spreading 

 segments, minutely tomentose externally : petals 5, spreading, much 

 longer than the calyx, elliptic, obtuse, minutely tomentose on the 

 outer, glabrescent on the inner surface ; stamens 5, longer than the 

 petals, the anthers small, the filaments narrow, compressed ; disc sub- 

 convex, pubescent ; ovary 0. Female flowers larger than the male ; 

 stamens rudimentary ; ovary obliquely globose-ovoid, compressed, densely 

 tomentose ; styles 3, radiating, horizontal or depressed, glabrous, bifid at 

 the apex. Drupe unknown. 



Tongka : Curtis, No. 2930. 



A very distinct and handsome species ; readily recognised amongst 

 J. ii. 65 



