Elaocarpus.] xxviii. tiliace^. (Maxwell T. Masters.) 46l 



down. Stamens 33-40. Ovary spherical, albido-pilose ; style longer than the sta- 

 mens. Drupe the size of a cherry, globose, purple ; stone tuberoled, grooved, 6-oelled, 

 S-seeded. 



2. E. parvifolius, Wall'. Cat. 684 and 2662 A, B ; leaves glabrous 

 elliptic acute at both ends minutely serrulate, stamens 15-20, anthers beard- 

 less, drupe oblong. C. Mull. Anot. defam. Eloeocarp. 24. 



Malacca, Mt. Ophir, Chiffith, &c. ; Pesaho, Jack ; Sikcapoke. — Distrib. Bdrneo. 



A small tree. Young shoots silky. Leaves 3-34 by 1 in.; petiole i-f in. Pedicels 

 and calyx villosulous. Fhwers about J in. diam. Glands large, 2-lobed, opposite the 

 sepals. StameTis in pairs between each gland, opposite the petals, and singly opposite 

 the glands and sepals. Ovary 5-celled, cells opposite the petals. Drupe | in. and np- 

 Trards, olive-shaped ; stone 5-celled. — In one of Wallich's specimens the drupe is globose. 



3. E. nitidus, Jack Mai. Misc.; ex Hook. Bot, Miic. ii. 84; leaves 

 ovate-lanceolate serrate, stamens 15, anthers beardless, drupe globose. 

 Mvi. Fl. Ind. Bat. i. pt. 2, 208 ; Wall. Gat. 2670. 



Macacoa and Pehano, Jach, &c. — Disteib. Java. 



A tree. iea»es 4-6 by 2-2^ in., base tapering; glabrous, petiole 1-| in. Flowers 

 \ in. diam. Sepals linear, acute, thinly pilose. Stamens 15, 10 in pairs between the 

 glands. Drupe globose; stone rugose, 5-celled, one cell only usually fertile. — Like F. ro, 

 lustus, but differing in the anthers and fruit. 



Sect. II. Dlcera.. 'Mowers bisexual. Anthers not, or scarcely prolonged 

 at the apex {see also E. prunifoHus and E. pedunculatus). Drupe 1-3-ceUed^ 



* Anthers usually bearded, sometimes not {see E. robustus and E. lancese- 



folius). 



4. E. serratus, L. ; W. & A. Prodr. i. 82, riot of Eoxb. ; leaves elliptic 

 obtuse or acuminate crenate-serrate, stamens 20-35, anther-valves sparingly 

 bearded, drupe oblong, stone tubercled 1-ceIled 1-seeded. Watt. (7a<. 2666 

 B, F, K, L; Thwaites Enum. 32; Miq. Fl. Ind. Bat. i. pt. 2, 208. E. Pirincara, 

 Wall. Gat. 2664 paHly, not of DG. E. integrifolius, Lam. Bit. 469; DC. 

 Prodr. i. 519. ? E. lacunosus, Wall. Gat. 6858, 9026. 



Tropical Himalaya ; Sikkim, 2-3000 ft., Sk.f., Nipal, Wallich; Eabtebn Bbkgal, 

 and the Eastern and Western Peninsulas. — Distrib. Java. . 



A free. Leaves 4-5 by 2J in., glabrous, base tapering ; petiole IJ in. ' Racemes 

 scarcely so long as the leaves, ascending. Flower-hvds ovoid-conical.' Flowers \ in. 

 diam. Sepals ovate, speckled, glabrous. Petals laciniate halfway down, ciliate at the 

 edges. Ovary villous, 3-celled. Drvpe the size and form of a small olive, edible; stone' 

 oijong, pointed, tubercled, pitted, 1 -celled. — In liamsitcV a integrifolius the leaves are 

 nearly entire. The plant called E. serratus in Roxburgh's unpublished drawings ap- 

 parently belongs to this species, having a 1-celled stone, while the species so called in 

 Roxburgh's, I'l. Ind. ii. 596, is described as 3-celled. I have referred E, lacunosus, 

 Wall., both to this species and to E. cuneatus with doubt. The specimens have leaves 

 and fruit only, and are insufficient to determine to wMch species (if either) they really 

 belong. 



,5. E. floribundus, Blume Bydr. 120; leaves ellipticroblong acuminate, 

 crenate-serrate base acute, peduncles spreading, stamens about 20, anthers , 

 bearded, drupe ovoid 1-celled 1-seeded. Mig[. Fl. Ind. Bat. i. pt. 2, 210. 

 E. grossa. Wall. Gat. 2661. E. serratus, Koxb. ex Wall. Gat. 2666 A, B, partly. 

 E. oblongus. Wall. Gat 2677; C MiM. Anot. defam. Eloeocarp. 19, f.'SO.' 

 E. Lobbianus, TWcz. m i/6sc. 5m«. 1858, 235. 



Eastern Bengal ; Khasia MtsJ, alt. 3-4000 ft., and Chittagong ; Assam, Oriffith; 

 Tenasserim, Hdfer; Singapore ; Birma, Kure. — Distrib. Java. 



A tree. Leaves 4 by 2i in. and upwards, coriaceous, glabrous, acute at both ends, 

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