486 CLXiv. PAMDANE^. (Hook. f.) [Pandanus. 



orange yellow. Drupes 2^-3 in. long, usually in groups of 3-5 in. one series but 

 often more, epiearp fleshy. — Descr. from Kurz. 



Impeefbctlt known and ttndesceibed species. 

 1. P. AtBus, Sort, ew Stevd. Norn. Ed. 2, ii. 251. — " Ind. Or." 



■2. P. &KAMINIPOLITTS, Kurz in Seem. Jowrn. Bot. v. (1867) 104 ; For. Flor. ii. 

 507; leaves 12-18 by ^4 in., margins with minute straight spinules, young fruit 

 eiect ellipsoid, stigma sessile trigonous. Solms in lAnniea, xlii. (1878) 50. — 

 Tenasserim, Selfer. 



3. P. HUMILIS, Thwaiies Enum. 327 (excl. syn.) ; leaves 7 ft. by 1-li in., very 

 coriaceous, with stout marginal spines, filaments very short, anthers very slender 

 i-i in. long, fruit globose spicate and drupes like those of P. jurcatusj — Ceylon, 

 ThwaiUs ; OP. 3740 (used for fencing). 



i. P. HouLMTii, Oarriere in SeV. Bortic. 1868, 210, f. 23 ; leaves 6 ft. 6 in. by 

 3-3^ in. abruptly caudate-acuminate reddish green above coppery red beneath, 

 marginal spines distant incurved, male spadix 16 in. long, spikes 2^-4^ in., spathes 

 coppery rose-oolrd., stamens in compact bundles. — Singapore, 



5. P. INTEGBIPOLITJS, Lour. ex Steud. Nom. Ed. 2, ii. 251. — " Ind. Or. China." 

 — I do not find this name in Loureiros Fl. Cochiuch. or elsewhere. 



6. P. Lais, Kurz in Nat. Tijdsehr. Ned. Ind. xxvii. (1864) 218; in Ann. Mv,s. Bot. 

 I/ugd. Bat. ii. 54 ; habit of P. furcatus, fruit solitary or racemed, crown flat or 

 depressed, stigmas more slender incurved bifid. Sohns Z. c. P. horridus, JReinw. 

 (fid. Kurz). P. furcatus, Bassk. PI. Jar. Rar. 163 ; ? Miq. Analect. Ind. ii. 10, 

 t. 11, pi. (J?. P. furcatus /3 malesica, Kurz in Seem. Journ. Bot. v. (1867) 102. — 

 Singapore (Kwrz), Sumatra, Java, &c. 



7. P. LAETls, Rumph. ; Kurz For. Fl. ii. 508 ; arboreous or shrubby much 

 branched 20-25 ft., branches rooting, leaves elongate linear glaucous green 2-4 ft. 

 by 2-2^ in. very acuminate without spines, male spadix very scented exactly as in 

 P. adratissimus, but margins and midrib of the white spathes quite unarmed, 

 stamens racemosely connate, anthers mucronate, fruit unknown. ? Wall, Cat. 

 8588 B. — Burma, cultivated, Kurz; ? Tavoy, Wallich. — Descr. from Kurz. 



8. P. Lebau, Jones in As. Research, iii. (1799) 163, with two plates ; a tall tree 

 40-50 ft., with the habit of P. furcatus, but very slender, and with much larger 

 fruit, drupes aggregate. Toigt Bort. Suiurb. Calcutt. 683 ; Kurz in Journ. As. Soc. 

 Beng. xxxviii. (1869) 452 ; For. Fl. iii. 507 ; Solms I. c. 66. P. Leram, var. 

 iiiacrocarpa, Kurz in Seem. Journ. Bot. v. (1867) 106. Roussinia indica, Qaud, 

 Toy. Bonite Bot. t. 21. — Nicobar Islds., Fontana ; Andaman Islds., Kurz. 



9. P. LlNNa;i, Gaud. Toy. Bonite Bot. t. 22, f. 1-8 ; Solms I. c. 67.— India. — 

 Of this Solms remarks, cf. P.fascicularis. According to Gaudicbaud's figure the 

 drupes are very large, 3 in. long, in groups of 10 with rounded crowns and short 

 stigmas grooved on one side ; nothing is known of its origin. 



10. P. 0BNATU8, Kwz in Journ. As. Soc. Beng. xxxviii. (1869) 147 ; in Flora, 

 1869, 451 ; leaves very long caudate-acuminate acutely serrate, fruit solitary ter- 

 minal long peduncLed cylindric glaucous surrounded by very short scale-like spathes, 

 drupes unripe small obconic densely crowded but not confluent in groups, crown 

 polygonal glaucous narrowed into a spiniform slender upcnrved style with a linear 

 stigma. Solms I. c. 11. Fisquetia ornata and mllitaris, Qaud. Toy. Bonite Bot. t. 5 ; 

 Solms I. c. 65. — Malacca and Singapore, Qaudichaud, Griffith. — Described chiefly 

 from Solms, who examined Gaudicbaud's specimen and drawing. There are young 

 fruits of it in the Kew Museum, from Grifiith ; they are spicate, cylindric, 3-4 in, 

 long by 1-lJ diam., and remarkable for their glaucous surface. 



11. ^..OT/AJiva, Kurz in Journ. As. Soc. Beng. xxxviii. (1869) 147; in Flora, 

 1869, 451 ; a small species according to Gaudicbaud's figure, with leaves 18-24 by 

 J in., gradually narrowed into fine points, and small globosely oblong terminal 



