574 ADDITIONS AND COERECTIONS. 



P. 77. Ilex odm-ata, Ham.— Syn. /. smrata, Royle. Vem. GarsMn, Gar- 

 kaula, Kamaon. 



P. 84. Several climbing shrubs of this Order are found in Central India and 

 the sub-Himalayan forests, belonging to the tribe of Gowanieoe, with the ovary 

 adnate to the calyx : 1. Govanialeptostachya, DC. ; Wight & Arn. Prodr. 166. 

 — Vem. Kola lag, Kamaon. Leaves ovate-acuminate, crenate, with 5-6 main 

 lateral nerves, arcuate. Flowers greenish in long slender, panicled racemes, 

 tendiUs simple, generally at the base of racemes. Fruit dry, inferior, with 3 

 broad wings, i in. across, separating into 3 coriaceous, 1-seeded, indehiscent 

 carpels. Sub Jlimalayan tract of !fi[amaon. Bengal. 2. G. mierocarpa, DO. ; 

 Wight & Arn. Prodr. 167. Similar, but racemes, branchlets, and young leaves 

 rusty-tomentose while young ; leaves entire, glabrous and subcoriaceous when 

 full-grown, and smaller fruit. South and probably Central India. 3. Helinus 

 lanceolatus. — Syn. Gouania Icmceolata, Wall. A slender twining shrub with 

 entire lanceolate leaves, branchlets endiug in short simple tendrils, flowers um- 

 bellate, fruit obovoid, not winged, coriaceous. Plains of N.W. India, common 

 in the sub-Himalayan tract of the Panjab aiid Kamaon, ascending to 4000 ft. 

 Fl. in May, June. 



P. 85, 1. 10 from below, read " Acajou " for " Acayow." 



P. 95. The shrub mentioned as Paliurus acMeatUS in the Bussahir Forest 

 Report, p. 63 — Vem. Thvm, upper limit in Kunawar at Javi — ^is Sageretia 

 theesans, Brongn. Paliurus is a shrub similar to Zizyphus, but fruit with a 

 broad orbicular membranous wing 1 in. diam., of the Mediterranean region, 

 common in Palestine, found east as far as Armenia, Kurdistan, and North 

 Persia. 



P. 96. S. Kurz informs me that the common Ventilago of Burma is V. coHy- 

 culata. 



P. 99. E. Regel, in a late paper on the American, Chinese, and Japanese 

 species of Vitis, unites V. parvifoliUj Roxb., with V. vulpina', Iiinn., and f'i 

 lanata, Roxb., with V. Lahrusca, Linn. V. vulpina and Lahrusca inhabit 

 North America and Japan, In the same paper he advances the opinion, that 

 V. vinifera is no original species at all, but the product of long-continued cul- 

 tivation of the two last-named species. It is trae that the grape-vine agrees 

 with them as well as with V. pannfolia and lanata, in pentamerous flowers 

 and petals cohering at the apex ; but its cultivation commenced in Western 

 Asia, and neither V. IwnMa nai parvifolia, nor any of the forms of V. Labmsca 

 and vulpina, have, as far as I am aware, been found in Western Asia. 



Pp. 99-101. Vitis latifolia, lanata, indica, adnata, lanceolaria, are common 

 in Burma, S. Kurz. y. himalouyoma is found in Kunawar as far as Umi, 



P. 102. Leea macrophylla. Common in Burma. 



P. 104. At high elevations the Indian Horse-Chestnut is bare in winter, the 

 young leaves appearing some time before the flowers. The buds are small and 

 membranous, those of A. Hippoeastanum are large and viscid. Cultivated in 

 Kimawar, upper limit in the valley, Jangi on the right and Purbani on the left 

 side. — Vem. Fu. 



P. 114. Staphylea Emodi. Kunawar as far up as Chergaon. 



P. 117. SaMa caimanvlata has purple, not green flowers ; the flowers oi S. 

 pamculata — ^Vem. Bakal pata — Kamaon, are yeUow, and the ripe fruit of an 

 ultramarine blue (Madden). 



P. 117. Character of jltMcart^iacece, add : ovaiy free. 



P. 118. In Kunawar upper limit of Rhus Cotvnms above Wangtu, and of B. 

 semialata, Umi. 



P. 122. Pistacia integeiTima, J. L. Stewart. Upper limit in Kunawar : 

 Umi on the right, and Kilba on the left bank. 



P. 152. DaWergia volubilis. Common in Burma, S. Kurz. 



