TREES AND SHRUBS. 



, broadly cum 



ate at the base, entire, yellowish green and 



ute glands am 



axillary tufts of fascicled hairs on the lower 



broad, with f c 



ur or five pairs of curving and anastomosing 



from 1 to 1.5 



centimetres in length, glabrous or sparingly 



ter, on angula 



r peduncles, from 1 to 1.5 centimetres long, 



IV. Megalotinus, Maximowicz. 



stipules; drupe bluish black or purple, 



to oblong; stone compressed, slightly grooved or sometimes with a median dorsal groove and two ventral grooves; albumen i 

 solid (except in No. 37); giabrescent shrubs; winter-buds with one pair of scales; a rather heterogenous group which shows in L 

 some species a close relation to the preceding section and in others to the two following sections. , ' 



/J I 



Corolla campanulate, with upright short lobes; fruit ovoid, black; leaves coriaceous, entire or remotely toothe 

 Leaves lustrous above, from 8 to 15 centimetres long; corymbs glabrous; a tree. 35. V. cylind 



Leaves dull above, from 4 to 8 centimetres long; corymb pubescent; a shrub. 36. V. crassii 



Corymbs pyramidal in outline; the central ray elongated, with several tiers of umbels; stone oblong, with I 

 on the ventral side; albumen ruminate; leaves large, chartaceous, remotely toothed. 37. V. pyrami 



Corymbs umbelliform, with the rays of equal length, or the central one shorter; albumen solid. 

 Leaves entire. 



Corymbs sessile, from 12 to 17 centimetres broad; leaves large, oblong, chartaceous, often in thre 



Corymbs stalked; leaves ovate, opposite, Iepidote beneath and setose on the veins. 39. V. setiger 

 Leaves denticulate, large, with the veins partly ending in the teeth; corymbs lateral, long-stalked. 



40. V. AMPLIF 



35. Viburnum cylindricum, Hamilton. See p. 91, t. 143. 



36. Viburnum crassifoltum, n. sp. 

 Leaves coriaceous, elliptic, acutish and usually twisted at th 



glabrous on the upper surface, lighter green, with scattered brov 



surface, from 4 to 7.5 centimetres long and from 2.5 to 3.5 centi 



veins slightly impressed above and elevated beneath; petioles 



hairy, reddish. Corymbs terminal, from 4 to 5 centimetres in 



fasciculate-pilose; rays seven, angular, loosely covered with fascicled hairs. Flowers unknown. Drupes on ravs „f the i 



order, sessile, bluish black, ovoid, 5 millimetres high, crowned by the persistent calyx; stone slightly compressed, with one s 



ventral furrow and two slight dorsal furrows. 



high, with upright angular branches fasciculate-pilose during their first season, becoming glal 



o be with the Indian 



sparse stellate hairs on the veins and veinlets on the lower surface, from H to 14 centimetres long and from (i („ H ~, ,.,., .;„„.»- s 

 broad; petioles grooved, from 1.5 to 2 centimetres in length, yellowish <t.dlat.-i........,tos.. V„rv,nU ,,„ ht,, ■-,! ,»„ ]',.„-,' ! j,r-„ 1 



lets, from 7 to 9 centimetres in diameter, on slender peduncles from 4 to 5 cctim.-tn-s long, and ered l,k, the ,,'vs with str- 

 iate tomentum; *ay> font to s.x, slender, about 2.5 centimetres in length. Flowers unknown. Drupes on rays of the second and 

 third order ovoid-oblong, about 8 millimetres long and 5 millimetres broad, crowned by the persistent calyx; style cylindric, 

 exceeding the ovate or oval-oblong calyx-lobes, persistent; stone with a deep dorsal furrow and two slight ventral furrows. 



A shrub from 3 to 4 metres high, with terete branches loosely covered with a yellowish stellate tomentum while young, and 

 becoming glabrous and light brownish yellow in their second year. Winter-buds with one pair of stellately pubescent scales, 

 returned b S fo' ^ ^ 8 ° Uthea8tern mountains > altitnde 2000 metres, A . Henry (No. 13470 in Herb. Arnold Arbo- 



Viburnum amplifolium is most nearly related to Viburnum Colebrookianum, Wallich, but is easily distinguished from that species 

 by the leafy flowering branchlets, by the larger fruits, and by the different venation of the leaves. 



and grayish or 



reddish 1 



rown the following 



year. Winter-buds wi 



th one pair of 



scales. 







China: Yun 





gtze, on grass-cove 



red mountains, altitud 



e from 1800 



to 2000 m 





A. Ht 



Arnold Arbor 



turn). 















Viburnum cr 



assifolium 



seems most closely 



elated to Viburnum cyli 



idricum, Ham 



lton, but is 



jasily 



distillf, 



by the pubesce 



nt inflore 



cence, the smaller 



nil green leaves, and s 



urubby habit. 









37. Viburjt 





iiDATUM, Rehder. 



See p. 93, t. 144. 











38. Viburn 



TO TERN/ 



ltum, Render. See 



p. 37, t. 117. 











39. VlBURN 



JM SETIG 



;rum, Hance, Jour. 



Bot. xx. 261 (1882).— 



Henisley, Jour. Linn. So 



,, lxii 



. 350. 



China: Szec 



b'uan, Mo 



unt Koloshan, W. Mesny 











This species 



is only kr 



own from Hanee's 



pecimen, which I have 



not seen; its 



nearest con 





, SPeji 



Viburnum punc 



atum, Ha 



tnilton, or possibly 



vith Viburnum fatidum 



Wallich.' 









40. VlBURN 





folium, n. sp. 













Leaves mem 



branaceou 



s, oval or ovate to e 



liptic-ovate, acuminate 



, rounded or 



broadly cun 



lata i 



t the 1 



the base, with f 



rom seven 



to nine pairs of vein 



s partly anastomosing a 



id partly end 



ng in the t« 



eth,d 



irk v.l 



ened with mini 



te tuberc 



es bearing caducou 



furcate hairs, on then 



>per surface, 



ighter gree 



i and 



glaim 



