Glyeomis.] xxxiii. rutace^. (J. D. Hooker.) 501 



obtuse at the base, pale beneath. Panides axillary, very short, few-flowered. Semh 

 broad-ovate or tnangular-ovate. Petals oblong or elliptic oblong. Stamens alternately 

 ^^w 'i.^T^^?'^ in-egularly dilated, concave within, Thw.); anthers small, cordate, 

 tts/c short thick, rather broader than the ovary.— 1 have seen onlv scraps of this I 

 take tte characters from Oliver and Thwaites. 



3. Gr. saplndoldes, Lindl. in Wall. Cat. 6376 : leaves 5-7-foliolate, 

 panicles branched from the base stout many-flowered, ovary 2-3-celled 

 hairy about as long as the thick style. 



Penang, Wallich, Maingay. — Distkib. Java. 



A tree 3 (?30) feet high, with the trunk as thick as a man's thumb (Maingay). 

 Branches teiete, glabrous. Leaflets 4-9 in., oblong or lanceolate, subacuminate. 

 i^aijicies 1-3 in., subpyramidal, branches short stout. Flowers shortly and stoutly 

 pediceUed. /bepafe orbicular-ovate. PetaU oblong or narrow oblong. IHsk small or 

 obsolete. Ovary shortly stipitate.— Kurz (Journ. Beng. As. Soc. 1871, pt ii. 49) sug- 

 gests that this will prove a form of O. cklorosperma, Sprengel (Cur. Post. 162) but I 

 do not see how this can be, Sprengel's plant being described as having terminal 

 innorescence. 



4. G. puberula, Lindl. in Wall. Cat. 6375 ; leaves usually 3-foliolate, 

 ovary 4-5-celled shortly stipitate oblong pilose. Oliv. in Journ. Linn, 

 boc. V. Suppl. n. 39. 



Penang and Singapore, Wallich. 



Leaflets 2-4 by |-1| in., caudate-acuminate. Pedicels yV^ in. Lish small, adnate 

 to the ovary. Style very short.— Perhaps a var. of G. pentaphylla, from which it differs 

 chiefly m the pilose ovary (Oliver). 



EXCLUDED SPECIES. 



' G. OREKDLATA, TuTcz. in Mosc. Bull. Soc. Nat. 1858, pt. ii. 250, is Murraya crenu- 

 lata, Ohv. (in Journ. Linn. Soc. v. Suppl. ii. 29), a native of Luzon and not of Sinca- 

 pore as Turczaninow states. 



'13. inCXCROIKIZiXiVia, Elume.. 



Unarmed trees. Leaves imparipinnate ; leaflets alternate, oblique. 

 Mowers in large terminal corymbose panicles. Calyx cupular, 3-5-toothed 

 or lobed. Petals 5, free, thick, valvate or subimbricate. Stamens 10, free, 

 inserted round a short or long disk, filaments linear-subulate, alternate 

 shorter, pvary 5- rarely 2-6-celled ; style constricted at the base, deci- 

 duous, stigma obtuse or capitate ; ovules 2, superposed in each cell. Berry 

 small, dry, usually 1-2-seeded, septa spirally twisted. Seeds oblong, testa 

 membranous ; cotyledons leafy, crumpled, radicle long. — Disteib. Species 

 3 or 4, tropical Asiatic and Oceanic. 



1. nx. pubescens, Blume Bijd. i.'137 ; pubescent, leaflets 9-15 ovate to 

 broad lanceolate, corymbs subsessile or peduncled finely pubescent, calyx 

 cupular entire or 5-lobulate, ovary 5- rarely 2-4-celled more or less hairy, 

 stigma capitate slightly broader than the style, berry glabrous. Oliv. in 

 Journ. Linn. Soc. v. Suppl. ii. 40 ; Bedd. Flor. Sylv. Anal. Oen. xliii. t. 7, f. 1 ; 

 Thwaites Enum. 46. Bergera integerrima, Roxb. Fl. Ind. ii. 376 ; Wall. 

 Gat. 6371. Aurantiacea, Wall. Cat. 8517, 8518. 



Central and Eastern tropical Himalaya; Nipal, Wallich; Sikkim, /. D. H.; 

 Assam ; Khasia Mts. ; Chittagong and from Birma southward to Malacca ; Ceylon. 

 — Distkib. Java, China and Eastward to the Pacific Islands. 



A smjill umbrageous tree. Leaves 6-18 in. ; leaflets subopposite and alternate, short- 

 petioled, waved, often caudate-acuminate, base often cordate, pubescent beneath, rarely 

 above. Cymes terminal, decompound, tomentose ; peduncle long or short ; pedicels 



