42 G. King — Materials for a Flora of the Malay Peninsula. [No. 1, 



Lamb. Ill t. 495, f. 1 ; Roxb. Fl. Ind. ii. 661 ; Wall. Cat. 6457 ; W. & A. 

 Prodr. 8 ; Blume Bijdr. 14, Fl. Jav. Anon. t. 9. Pierre Flore For. Coch. 

 Chine, Anon. t. 18 ; Griff. Notul. iv. 712. U. fracta, Wall. Cat. 6460. 

 TJ. axillaris, Roxb. Fl. Ind. ii. 667. TJnona odorata and 77. leptopetala, 

 Dunal Anon. 108 and 114; DG. Prodr. i. 90 and 91 ; Deless. Ic. Sel. 

 t. 88. 



In all the provinces, planted. Indigenous in Tenasserim, Java, and 

 the Philippines. 



2. Canangiuh Scortechinii, King n. sp. A tree 30 to 40 feet high : 

 young branches puberulous but speedily glabrous, dark-coloured and 

 lenticellate. Leaves membranous, broadly ovate, sub-acuminate, the 

 base broad rounded, slightly oblique ; both surfaces pubescent when very 

 young, ultimately glabrescent, the midrib and 6 or 7 pairs of nerves ad- 

 pressed-pubescent, glandular-dotted ; length 2 - 5 in., breadth 1*5 in. (fide 

 Scortechini ; length 3 to 7 in., breadth 2 to 3 in.) Cymes short, from the 

 axils of leaves or of fallen leaves, few-flowered, shortly pedunculate. 

 Floivers 1 to 1*25 in. long ; pedicels under 1 in., pale-pubescent with a 

 narrow, ovate, obtuse, mesial bracteole *25 in. long. Sepals ovate, sub- 

 acute, recurved, minutely yellowish-pubescent, '35 in. long. Petals 

 subequal, linear-obtuse, 1'25 in. long ; the claw short, thickened, pubescent 

 on both surfaces like the sepals. Stamens numerous ; the connective 

 with an apical process, bulbous at the base, suddenly tapering into a 

 sharp point. Ovaries numerous, oblong, glabrous except at the pubes- 

 cent base, with 6 or 8 ovules in two rows ; stigma sessile, truncate. 

 Ripe carpels unknown. 



Perak : Scortechini. 



Scortechini's specimens are in bud only and none of them has any 

 fruit. The foregoing description has been prepared partly from his notes 

 and partly from his specimens. The species differs from G. odoratum in 

 having smaller leaves, a different inflorescence, with smaller, quite in- 

 odorous, flowers. It is also a smaller tree. 



Doubtful Species. 

 Cananga ? monosperma H. f. and Th. Fl. Br. Ind. I, 57. Of this I 

 have seen only leaf-specimens. 



10. Unona, Linn. 

 Trees or shrubs, erect or climbing. Flowers often solitary, axillary 

 terminal or leaf-opposed. Sepals 3, valvate. Petals 6, valvate or open 

 in testivation, 2-seriate ; 3 inner sometimes absent. Torus flat or slightly 

 concave. Stamens cuneate ; anther-cells linear, extrorse, top of connec- 

 tive sub-globose or truncate. Ovaries numerous ; style ovoid or oblong, 

 recurved, grooved ; ovules 2-8, 1-seriate (rarely sub-2-seriate). Ripe 



