ADDITIONS AND COERECTIONS. 



p. 3. ScUzandragrandiflora, H. f. and Th. ; PI. Ind. i. 44.— Syn. Eadsura 

 grmidiflora, Wall. Tent. Fl. Nep. t. 14 {Magnoliaeeae). ' A glabrous climbing 

 shrub, without stipules, with white, fragrant, drooping aijcillary flowers ; ovaries 

 numerous, imbricated on a conical receptacle, which lengthens in fruit into a 

 cylindrical fleshy axis, 6-9 in. long, bearing numerous scarlet, fleshy, 2-seeded 

 carpels. Himalaya, Sutlej to Bhutan, between 6000 and 10,000 ft. Fl. April, 

 May ; fr. Oct. The fruit is eaten. 



P. 3, line 17 from below, dele " gynophore stalked." 



P. 3 „ 4 „ read " carpels in a loose stalked spike," instead of 



"capsules sessile on an elongated stalk." 



P. 5, Polyalthia cerasotMs^ Benth. & Hook. Prome district, S. Kurz. 



P. 8. Stephania rotunda,> Iiova. ; Hook, Fl. Ind. i. 103. — Syn. Gocculus 

 Soxburghiarms,Wa}l. Ciesa/mpelos glabra, Eoxb. Fl. Ind. iii. 840. Menisper^ 

 macece. Vem. Gajera, garjial, Kamaon. A large glabrous climber with a sub- 

 globose tuberous root. Leaves peltate, broad-ovate or suborbicillar, often repand 

 or sinuate-lobed, pale beneath, 3-7 in. diam. Flowers yellow, in aallary cymose 

 umbels. Male flowers : sepals 6-10, narrow-eimeate, biseriate, petals 3-5, obo- 

 vate, anthers 6, connate, inserted round the top of the staminal column, burst- 

 ing transversely. Female flowers : sepals 3-6, petals of thtf male. Drupe glab- 

 rous, endocarp compressed, horseshoe-shaped, dorsally tubercled, sides hollowed 

 and perforated. Seed ahnostTannulai. N.W. Himalaya, ascending to 7000 ft. 

 Kasia hills, Burma. Fl. AprLl-June. For the structure of the wood see Hooker 

 & Thomson, Flora Indica (1855), p. 195. 



P. 8. Tinospora cordifolia, ]mers. — ^Vem. GfUrcha, Kamaon. 



P. 8. Under Anamdrta Cocaulus. For a fuH description of this climber, see 

 WaUich, Descriptions of Indian Plants in Asiat. Eesearches, xiii. 403. 



P. 10. Gissampelos Pwreira, Linn. — ^Vem. Pari, Kamaon. The botanical 

 origin of the various stems and roots known as Pareira Brava and Radix Par- 

 evrae has lately been investigated by D. Hanburjr (Pharm. Journ. 1873, Aug. 

 2d and 9th). The result is> Siat the drug is not yielded by this plant. One of 

 the best kinds is the root of Ghondodendron tomentomm, Ruiz and Pavon, a 

 large climber of the same Family in Brazil, with bunches of large oval berries. 



P. 12. BerhenA adatica, Koxb.— Vem. Kihaora, Ungora, Kamaon. 



P. 12. B. i^durn, Royle.— Vem. Kingora. , tt 



P. 12. B. nepalensis, Spreng. — ^Vem. Pande hilmora, chotara, chotra, Ka- 

 maon. Hardy against walls in England. 



P. 13. HolhcelUa Mifdia, Wall.— Syn. Siav/rOonia latifolia and S. angus- 

 tifolia, Wall. Vern. Chphla, Kamaon. The fruit is eaten. 



P. 14. (Japparis aphyUa. A common and characteristic shrub of Soudan, 



