ADDITIONS AND COEEECTIONS. 575 



P. 154. Derris rohusta. In Burma, vern. Thitpagan—twA. D. Krawee, Roxb. 



P. 158. Acrocarpus fraxinifoUm. Burma, S. Kurz. 



P. 162. Bauhinm Vahlii. Burma, S. Kurzt 



P. 167. Line 6 from below, read "Mimosa scmdms, Linn." 



P- 174. Pithecolohium lobatum, Benth., ia a large tree in the moister forests 

 of Burma, with large, lobed pods and seeds similar in size and shape to those of 

 Entada scandem ; eaten as a condiment in Burma. Fl. Jan., Feb. (Tanym, 

 Burm.) Also Indian Archipelago. 



P. 175. Albizda procera. Indian Archipelago, Philippine Islands, and North 

 Australia. 



P. 176. Albizzia Lebbeh. Burma, S. Kurz. 



P. 177. Albizda Julibrisdn. In the Kunawar valley extends as f^r as 

 Wangtu. 



P. 179. Albizzia amara. In Kamaon, Madden. 



P. 180. Acacia arabica. — Sans. Khadira. 



P. 181. Line 24 from below, dele "uniformly distributed." 



P. 183. A. ebumea has sometimes 5 or 6 pairs of pinnw. The twisted and 

 broad pod represented in 1. 199 of Eoxb. Cor. PI. does not belong to this species ; 

 it may possibly belong to A. planifrons, W. & A. Prodr. 276, a small thorny 

 tree of Sovith India, which differs from A . ebumea by haTong the shorter spines 

 crooked, not straight. The Acacia from Kamaon(£Aes), mentioned at p. 180 

 under A. Latronum, is probably a villose variety of A . ebumea. This appears 

 from the full description given by Madden in p. 631 of his second (laper on the 

 Terai and outer mountains ot Kamaon (As. Soc. Joum. xviii. i. 631). Young 

 branches, petioles, and thorns very villous with rufous down, pinnse 3-5, leaflets 

 4-10; flowers white ; pods in umbels of 3-7, flat, smooth, linear, nearly straight, 

 pendulous, 3-8-seeded, 3-5 inj long, less than a quarter of an inch broad, the 

 border with a long shallow sinus between each seed. AU this agrees well with 

 A. ebumea, except the colour of the flower. Common in Garhwal up to the 

 Gangesj but apparently confined to the banks of the streams and rivers where 

 they enter the plains and Doons. 



P. 184. Mr Bentham. informs me that A. rupestris is closely allied to, and 

 perhaps not specifically distinct from, A. Senegal, Willd., which is synonymous 

 with A. Terek, Guill. et Perr., mentioned at p. 186. 



P. 191. Prunus perdca, cultivated in Kunawar as far as Sungnam on the 

 right, and Morung on the left bank. — ^Vern. Bek. 



P. 194. Line 6 from above, read "for" instead o^"but." 



P. 195. Prunus Mahaleb. Mountains of Greece in the region of the Silver 

 Fir. 



P. 196. Prinsepia utilis. Found in Kunawar as far as XJmi.— Vern, BeUing. 



P. 196. B^^>us ayrdifoUus, Don — Vern. Kabrola, hatrota, Almora, is, accord- 

 ing to Madden, synonymous with B. tiliaceus. 



P. 199. Two more species are mentioned by Madden in As. Soo. Joum. xviii. 

 i. : Buhus hypargyrus, Edgew., with red flowers and yellow woolly fruit. Crest 

 of Chinar near Naini Tal— p. 605. B. affinis, Madden, near B. flavus, Ham., 

 very green and glossy. Gagar Pass, Binsar, to 7300 ft., in shade only— p. 624. 



P 202 Bosa WebUana. — Vern. Bing yal. Commences at Pangi in Kunawar. 



P.' 204 Pyrus Pashia, Hamilton in Don's FI. Nep. 236, is the older name, 

 and should take precedence of P. variolosa, WaU. In Kunawar as far up as UmL 



P. 208. Photmia japonica^Syn. Eriobotrya japonica, Lmdley ; W. & A. 

 Prodr 302 ■ Wight Ic. t. 226 ; Mespilus japonica, Thunb. ; Eoxb. FI. Ind. ii. 

 510 • Bot Reg. t. 365 ; the Zoquat~iB a well-known fruit-tree, indigenous in 

 Japan and China, and now cultivated in Bengal, South and North- West India, 

 Leaves large lanceolate or ovate-lanceolate, tomentose beneath, with prominent 

 lateral nerve's, flowers white, fragrant, in terminal tomentose panicles. 



