246 USEFUL PLANTS OF GUAM. 



strung into rosaries and, according to Padre Blanco," yield a nutritious flour, which 

 is fed to convalescents. In Japan they are pounded in a mortar and cleaned and 

 used as meal and mochi. An infusion of the parched and ground grains, called 

 "kosen" by the Japanese, is used instead of tea.* 



Eefkrences: 



Coix lacryma^ohi L. Sp. PI. 2: 972. 1753. 

 Colales or Kulalis (Guam). See Adenanthera paronina. 

 Colales (Kulalis) halom-tano (Guam). See Abrus abrus. 

 Cold or Kol6 (Philippines). See Artocarpas communis. 

 Colocasia antiquonun. See Qdadium colocasia. 

 Colubrina asiatica. 



Family Rhamnaceae. 



Loc.iL XAMES. — Gasoso (Guam); Kabatiti, Uatitik (Philippines); Fisoa (Samoa); 

 Vuso levu (Fiji: "much-foam"); Tutu (Tahiti). 

 A glabrous shrub with alternate leaves and axillary clusters of small greenish flow- 

 ers having a fleshy disk in the calyx tube, suggesting the genus Euonymus or Cean- 

 othus. Leaves 5 cm. long by 2.5 cm. wide, ovate, subacuminate, crenate-serrate, 

 glabrous, membranous, 3-nerved at the base, the midrib pinnately branched; flowers 

 growing in very short axillary cymes; calyx 5-parted, tube hemispherical; petals 5, 

 clawed, springing from the margin of the disk, hooded; stamens 5; disk fleshy, 

 filling the calyx tube; ovary sunk in the disk and confluent with it, 3-celled, the cells 

 1-seeded, tardily dehiscent. 



This plant is widely spread in Polynesia and is found in India, Ceylon, Java, Bor- 

 neo, New Guinea, Australia, and southwest Africa. In Samoa and inFiji the leaves 

 are used for washing. They form a lather in water like soap. The vernacular 

 name in Fiji signifies "much lather" or "big foam." The special use to which it 

 is devoted in Samoa is the cleansing and bleaching of the white shaggy mats which 

 the natives make of the fiber of an urticaceous plant, Oypholophus macrocephalus. 

 The natives of Guam do not make use of it except for medicine, nor is it included by 

 Watt in his list of the useful plants of India. 



References: 



Colubrina asiatica (L.) Brongn. Ann. Sc. Nat. I. 10: 369. 1827. 

 Ceanothus asiaticus L. Sp. PI. 1: 196. 1753. 

 Combretaceae. Myeobalan family. 



This family is represented in Guam by the Malabar almond ( Terminalia catappa) 

 and the red-flowered mangrove {Lumnitzera liUorea). 

 Commelinaceae. 



To this family belong Commelina benghalensis and CommeUna nudiftora, creeping 

 plants with small 3-petaled blue flowers from spathe-like bracts, and Zygomenes cris- 

 tata, with scorpioid cymes of blue flowers inclosed in large falcate, imbricating bracts. 

 Commelina benghalensis. Dewflower. Dayfloweb. 



Family Commelinaceae. 



Local names. — Anagdlide azul (Spanish); Aligbafigon (Philippines). 

 A pubescent plant with stems 60 to 90 cm. long, dichotomously branched from the 

 base upward, creeping and rooting below; leaves short-petioled, 2.5 to 7.5 cm. by 



1 to 3.5 cm., ovate or oblong, obtuse, pubescent or villous on both surfaces, unequal 

 at base, cordate, rounded, or cuneate, the veins subparallel, 7 to 11 pairs; inflores- 

 cence inclosed in a spathe; spathes 1 to 3 together, short-ped uncled, funnel-shaped 

 or top-shaped, auricled on one side, pubescent or hirsute; upper cyme branched, 



2 or 3-flowered, lower 1 or 2-flowered or without flowers; sepals 3, small, oblong, 



a Flora de Filipmas, 689. 1837. 



6 Agriculture Society of Japan, Useful Plants of Japan, p. 5. 1895. 



