448 Lviii. cOMBEETACEa!. (C. B. Clarke.) ITermitialia. 



Vae. 2. ereniilata ; leaves narrowed into the petiole often otovate-elliptic adnlt 

 nearly glabrous beneath, young ovaiy glabrons. T. crennlata, Both Nov. Sp. 380 ; 

 W. # A. Prodr. 314. Pentaptera erenulata, Soxb. Sort. Benff. 34, Fl. Ind. ii. 438 ; 

 DC. Prodr. iii. 15 ; Wall. Cat. 3978. P. macrocarpa, WaU. Cat. 3982. — Deccan and 

 the sub-Himalaya; common. Burma; Kurz. Kurz For. Fl. Brit. Bwrma i. 458 

 states T. crennlata, Both, to be T. Arjuna of Beddome and Brandis. But both 

 Beddome and Brandis have stated that T. cremdata W. ^ A.iB a variety included 

 under their T. tomentosa. Kurz has not communicated any example of his T. erenu- 

 lata, nor in his description does he notice the character of the venation of the fruit 

 by which Dr. Brandis has separated T. Arjuna and T. tomentosa. The synonym 

 T. erenulata Kurz remains therefore doubtful. Perhaps as Mr. Thwaites hints T. 

 Arjuna (T. glabra, Enum. 104) and T. tomentosa should be made one species. 



Vak. 3. coriaeea ; leaves as in T. tomentosa typica but beneath with a close hard 

 fulvous tomentum rather than villous, fruit pubescent with minute fulvous hairs. 

 T. coriaeea, W. ^ A. Frodr. 315. Pentaptera coriaeea, Roxb. Sort. Beng. 34, Fl.Btd. 

 ii. 438. — Mountains of the C!oromandel Coast; Boxhurgh, Deccan; Herb. Bottler, 

 Malabar Hills ; Dr. Bitchie. 



Sect. HI. Chuncoa. Ihiit with three very vmequal wings, rarely more 

 than f in., often much smaller, 



9. T. paniculata, JRoth Nov. j^. 383 ; leaves oblong or elliptic acute 

 adnlt nearly glabrous, panicles compound, fruit brown-red villous with one 

 very broad and two narrow wings. W. Sf A. Prodr. 315 ; JDah. ^ Oibs. BonA. 

 Fl. 92 ; Sedd. Fl. Sylv. t. 20 ; Brand. For. Fl. 226. T. monoptera. Roth Nov. 

 %>. 382. T. triopt^a, Seyne in Serb. Rottl. Pentaptera paniculata, Roxb. 

 Sort. Beng. 34, Fl. Ind. ii. 442 ; BC. Prodr. iii. 14 ; WaU. Cat. 3980. Hiptag& 

 sp., WaU. Cat. 9029. 



MAT.AmTt ; lower hills from Bombay to Cochin ; common : NiLGHrai and Kiteg 

 mountains. 



A large tree, the innovations rusty-tomentose. Leaves 4-7 in., lower subopposit«, 

 upper alternate, base cordate, two glands generally present near tie base of tie mid- 

 rib beneath ; petiole J-f in. Spikes very dense, bracteoles and young ovaries villous. 

 Fruit about J in. long, with one wing J in. broad, the other two wings hardly 

 ^ in. broad. 



10. T. pyrifoUa, Kurz For. Fl. Brit. Burma i. 457; leaves crowded 

 towards the ends of the branches oblong- or broadly-lanceolate glabrous, 

 spikes simple, fruit indistinctly brown velvety with two broad wings and one 

 very narrow one. Pentaptera pyrifolia, Presl Epimd. Bat. 215. 



Pegu to Tesnasseeim, frequent ; Kurz, Heifer (ex Presl). Peome ; MacleUand. 



Attains 80 ft. ; glabrous except the innovations and spikes. Leaves 2-4 in., co- 

 riaceous, narrowed into the petiole ; petiole f-1 J in., without glands. Calyx densely 

 tawny or brown-pubescent. Fruit ^-J in. long, the two lateral wings about J-f in. 

 broad, chartaceous, rounded and striated. — ^Mr. Kurz cites as a doubtful synonym 

 T. javanica, Miq. Fl. Ind. Bat. i. pt. i. 602 ; the example of which at Kew agrees, 

 but has no fruit. 



11. T. myriocarpa, Seurch Sr Muell. Arg. Obs. Bot. 215 ; leaves ob- 

 long or elliptic acute, adult nearly glabrous, petiole very sbort, spikes panicled, 

 fruit yellow shining with two very broad wings and one narrow one. Kurs 

 For. Fl. Brit. Burma i. 467. Pentaptera Saja, WaH. Cat. 3983. 



Subtropical valleys in Sikkim and Bhotan, alt. 1000-3000 ft., abundant. Assam 

 TTtt.t. s ; Simons, Griffith. — ^Distrbb. Ava, Bhamo. 



Attains 80-100 ft., the innovations pubescent-tomentose. Leaves 4-8 in., base 

 obtuse, nerves numerous and very parallel, upper subopposite ; petiole about ^ in., 



