SAPINDACE^. 415 



47. Schmidelia L.' — Flowers .polygamo-dicecious, irregular, or 

 subregular; sepals 4, decussate, imbricate; 2 exterior, smaller. 

 Petals 4, alternate, often minute (sometimes 0), either glabrous, or 

 vUlose-barbate •within. Disk irregular or subregular, interior to 

 petals, either continuous lobate, or consisting of glands 2, 4, oppo- 

 sitipetalous, rarely very small (or 0). Stamens generally 8, hypo- 

 gynous, subcentric or often excentric free, oftener short; anthers 

 introrse, 2-rimose. Germen excentric (in male flower rudimentary), 2- 

 dymous or 2-3-lobed ; cells 2,3, 1 -ovulate ; style inserted between the 

 lobes of the germen, stigmatose at apex variously 2-3-lobed; micro- 

 pyle of ascendent subbasilar ovule extrorsely inferior. Fruit 1-3- 

 coccous, dry, coriaceous or sometimes a little fleshy ; embryo of seed 

 shortly arillate at base exalbuminous curved ; cotyledons 2-plicate. — 

 Small trees or ecirrhose shrubs ; leaves alternate exstipulate ; leaflets 

 1-3 (or rarely 5), entire or serrate, sometimes punctate or lineate ; 

 flowers^ in axillary simple or loosely ramose racemes, sometimes 

 oymiferous. {All tropical regions?) 



48? Hemigyrosa Bl.* — Flowers polygamous irregular (nearly 

 of Pancovia) ; petals 4, 5 ; the fifth esquamate or 0. Stamens 8, disk 

 1 -lateral, and the remaining characters those of Pancovia. Fruit 

 spherical or 3-gonal, woody or coriaceous, iudehiscent, externally 

 tomentose or velutinous, hirsute within ; cells 3, 1-spermous ; em- 

 bryo of exarillate seed exalbuminous ; cotyledons fleshy equal. — 

 Sericeo-pubescent trees ; leaves alternate, abruptly or imparipinnate ; " 

 leaflets opposite petiolulate oblong ; iuflorescenoe,^ etc. of Pancovia '' 

 {Tropical Asia?) 



. 67.— J. Gen. 247.— DO. Prodr. i. — Pcepp. and Endl. Nov. G-m. et Spec. t. 244.— 



610.— Cambess. MSm. Mm. xviii. 23.— Spach, A.'&ica. Fl. Abyss. Tent.t.iT ; Cuba,t. 29, 30. — 



Suit, d, Buffon, iii. 50. — Endl. Gen. n. 6605. — Guill. and Peer. Fl. Sen. Tent. i. 120. — Tobcz. 



Bl. JRumpMa, iii. 139.— B. H. Gen. 396, 999, u. BuU.Mose. (1858), i. 398.— Griseb. Fl. Brit. W.- 



14. — Allophyllus L. Gen. n. 476. — Bl. Eun^hia, Ind. 126. — Mia. Fl. Ind.-Bat. i. p. ii. 574 {Allo- 



m. 121, — Aporetica FossT. Char. Gen. 131, t. 66. phyllus), 576; Suppl. i. 199. — Thw. Fmrni. PI. 



'. J. Gen. 247.— PoiR. Ilict. viii. 263; Zeyl. 55.— Hart, and Sond. Fl. Cap. i. 238.— 



Suppl. V. 406.— Lamk. III. t. 309.— Ge»!eW« Baker, Fl. Trap. Afr. i. 420.— Karst. II. 



Lour. PI. Coehinch. (ed. 1790), &i8.— Toxica- Columb. t, 142.— Tr. and Pl. in Jnn. Sc. Nat. 



dendron G.ertn. Fruel. i. 207, t. 44 (notTauNB.). ser. 4, xviii. 369. — Benth. Fl. Austral, i. 461. — 



—Nassavia Vellob. Fl. Flum iii. t. 166, 166. Seb. and Panch. Bois. N,-CaMd. 229.— Walp. 



2 Small, often closed. Sep. i. 414 ; ii. 814 ; v. 361 ; Ann. i. 133 ; ii. 



' Spec, ad 80. Burm. Fl. Inl. t. 32, fig. 1 208, 216 {^Allophyllm) ; iv. 378 ; vii. 621 



(JTsubia). — ^H. B. K. Nov. Gen. et Spec. v. 121.— {Sohmiedelia), 622 {A'llophyllum). 

 P. Bbauv. Fl. Ow. et Ben. t. 107.— A. S. H. * Rumphia, iii. 166.— B. H. Gen. 396, n. 11. 



Mem. MuB. xii. t. 13 ; PI. Us. Bras. t. 67 ; PI. « Pale. 



Bern. BrSs. 169, 1. 19 ; Fl. Bras. Mer. i. 379, t. 82. 6 Generally hoary. 



— Labill, Sert. Auttro-caled. t. 52. — Boxb. PI. 7 Jo whicli genus, and also to Anomosanthia 



Coromand.i. 61 [Ornitrophe). — Wight and Arn. and to Seorodendrum, very near (see p. 380). 

 Prodr. i.\09. — Wioht icon. ^ 401, 964, 964'''. » Spec. al)0ut3.PEBS. )Sj/».i. 413 (OMpoMia). — 



