Mallofus] CXV. EUPHORBIACE/E. 981 



4 to 5 ft. high ; bark beautifully purple ; branohlets elongated, 

 variously curved, pendulous or ascending ; flowers whitish ; fruit 

 tricocoous. In dense wooded elevated thickets at the Capopa spring 

 near Sange ; fl. and fr. April and May 1855, and Feb. 1856. Also a 

 tree-like form, near Undelle ; fr. June 1855. No. 342. 



30. MACARANGA P. Thouars ; Bentlf. & Hook. f. Gen. PI. iii. 

 p. 320. 



1. M. heterophylla Muell. arg. in DO. Prodr. xv. 2, p. 993 (1866). 

 Mappa heterophylla Muell. arg. in Journ. Bot. ii. p. 336 (1864). 

 Tanwrius heteirophyUus 0. Kuntze, Rev. Gen. PI. ii. p. 620 (1891). 



Sierra Leone. — An arborescent shrub ; branches patent, almost 

 drooping-scandent ; leaves some not lobed, others 3- to 5-lobed, gland- 

 dotted beneath. In the elevated forests of Sugar Loaf Mountain, 

 near Freetown ; scarcely in good fl. Sept. 1853. No. 464. 



2. M. angolensis Muell. arg. in DC, I.e., p. 994 ; Ficalho, PI. 

 Uteis, p. 257 (1884). Mappa angolensis Muell. arg. in Journ. 

 Bot., I.e., p. 337. Tana/rius angolensis O. Kuntze, I.e., p. 620. 



Goi/UNCrO Alto.^A robust arborescent shrub, 6 to 8 ft. high and 

 more, subscandent among other shrubs with long sarmentose branches 

 or sometimes standing quite erect, with a menispermaceous habit 

 (cf. Jateorhiza sirigosa Miers) ; trunk 1 to 1^ in. in diameter, spiny ; 

 leaves hard and dryly coriaceous, deep green and somewhat shining 

 above, not lobed or 3- or 5-lobed, the young ones sometimes densely 

 ferruginous-tomentose ; petiole auriculate-stipulate at the base ; 

 flowers dioecious, the female ones yellowish dusky ; fruit spherical, very 

 densely clothed with small golden-coloured glands. In dense wooded 

 thickets close to streams in the ascent from Sange towards Sobato de 

 Bumba, female fl. 7 and 14 July and in Aug. and Oct. 1855, fr. Oct. 

 1855. No. 449. A shrub, 4 to 7 ft. high, not milky ; the older stems 

 clothed with long distant spines, the younger ones unarmed ; branches 

 patent, much elongated, sarmentose, widely climbing ; leaves rigid, 

 glandular at the insertion of the petiole, sometimes sub-entire, in other 

 cases on the same branch 3- or 5-lobed, spiooth and somewhat glossy 

 above, marked beneath with transverse arched veinlets ; leaf -lobes 

 abruptly acuminate ; flowers dioecious, the male ones very densely 

 crowded on a bractlike receptacle ; stamens apparently 2. Fruit 

 drupaceous, spherical, as large as a small pea or a seed of Vicia Cracca 

 L., very densely covered with very small viscid golden-coloured 

 hyaline granules. In rather dense very shady primitive forests in 

 Serra de Alto Queta, avoiding places once cultivated and afterwards 

 in secondary woods ; male fl. middle of Aug. 1856. No. 450. The 

 negro name of the shrub is " Dibala." 



The following specimens of large foliage appear to belong to 

 this genus, and perhaps to this species : — 



Ambriz, etc. — Leaf (in one case) trifid, excised and mucronulate 

 at the apex, 7-nerved and deeply cordate at the base, 17 in. long by 16 

 in. broad, puberulous along the veins ; tertiary veins arching ; petioles 

 12 to 18 in. long, with large glands at the extremity. In the interior 

 mountainous wooded parts of the district, for example, at Bembe, 

 about 130 miles from Ambriz, whence the leaves and a fragment of 

 the stem were received by Welwitsch, having been sent by his friend 

 Monteiro. The sap of the stem and petioles is watery and somewhat 

 viscid. No. 451. Leaves without their petioles (one leaf only preserved) 



