ADDENDA 707 



P. 232. K nana. Singbliiim. Miiibu district, Upper Burma. 



„ „ F. involucrata. East Bengal. 



„ ,; Add : Rliyncliosia pseudo-cajaii, Camb. Yern. Lada, Haz. Outer Nortli West 

 Himalaya and Siwaliks, ascending to 7,000 ft. A shrub, softly grey-tomeatose with 

 minute yellow glands on 1. and calyx. L. 3-foliolate, fl. yellow in short corymbs, pod 

 oblong, 1 in. long, 1-2-seeded, persistently grey-woolly. 

 P. 233. JDalbergia Sissoo. Ann. Gard. Calc. X. t. 34. 



„ „ JD. latifoUa, Ann. X t. 62. 



„ „ B. sissoides, G-rah. ; Ann. X. t. 68 ; Bourdillon in Ind. Por. 1905, 124, may now 

 be regarded as a distinct species. Vern. Vel-itti Travancore (J). latifoUa : Kar itti). 

 In Travancore it grows on the outer hills, up to 2,000 ft. Young foliage bright green, 

 leaflets 5-10, generally 7, pointed at both ends, petiolules J~J in. long. The heart- 

 wood never has any tint of red. 



P. 233, In Ann. Gard. Calc. X. 82 Colonel Prain unites D, eTnarginata, Boxb. with 

 D, latifoUa. 

 P. 233. D. rimosa, Ann. X. t. 11, — Myitkyina, Upper Burma. 



„ 234. JD. foUacea, Ann. X. t. 81. D. ovata, Ann. t. 59. 



„ „ D. obtusifolia, Prain, Ann. X. t. 58 may be regarded as distinct. Yern. 

 Moksoma, Burm. Burma, Upper and Lower. Attains 50 ft., leaflets 5-7, 3-5 by 

 2-4 in. Fl. greenish white, sweet scented. 



P. 234. D. cultrata, Ann. X. t. 32. Collettii, Ann. X. t. 30. luTmanica^ Ann. X. t. 51. 

 ruUginosa, Ann. X. t. 40. congesta, Ann. X, t. 43. Gardneriana^ Ann. X. t. 44. 

 confertiflora^ Ajm.'X.. t. 28. velutina, Ajxjx. X. t. 55. rostrata, Ann. X. t. 36. Kmgiana, 

 Ann. X. t. 37. tamarmdifoUa, Ann. X. 48.— Chittagong. 



P. 235. acacicBfolia, Ann. X. t. 47. malaharka, Ann. X. t. 46. mimosoides^ Ann. X. t. 

 25. multifiora^ Ann. X. t. 18. coromandeliana, Ann. X. t. 21. Melanoxyldn^ Ann. X. 

 t. 22. The two last species should stand under A. Trees or erect shrubs. 

 P. 235. Z). Mela7io3cglo7i. Eastern Tropical Africa, possibly indigenous in the Y^estern 

 Peninsula. 



P. 236. D. ^mniculata. Regarding the anatomy of the stem, see Thomas G. Hill in 

 Annals of Botany. XY. 183. 



P. 236. B. lanceolaria. Ann. X. t. 76. Subhimalayan tract from the Jumna east- 

 wards, rare in the western portion. Z>. assamica, Ann. X. t. 71. pajiicidata^ Ann. X. 

 t. 68. Kurziij Ann. X. t. 83 



JP. 237. JD. cana, Ann. X. t, 84. D. glomeriflora, Ann. X. t. 6b. JD. sericea, Ann. X. t. 66. 

 D. Oliveri, Ann. X. t. 75. In Ann. Gard. Calc. X. 92. D. Frazeri is united with this 

 species. D. Hemsley^ Ann. X. t. 77. D. Wattii^ Ann. X. t. 78, JD. vohthilisj Ann. X. t. 85. 

 — Behar. Chutia Nagpur. Chittagong. 



P. 238. D. stipulacea, Ann. X. t. 87. D. Thomson^ Ann. X. t. 13. D. spinosa, Ann. X. 

 t. 9. — Sundriban. D. torta, Ann. X. t. 42. — Sundriban. 

 P. 239. JD. parmflo7^a, Ann. X. t. 8. JD. reniformis, Ann. X. t. 91. 



„ „ Pterocarpus daXbergioides^ the Andaman JPadauk, is leafless for one or two 

 months between March and Maj^ Its principal associates are : TerminaUa bialafa, 

 Boinbax hisigne, StercuUa alata, Lagerstrcemia hypoleuca, and in places Oxytenan- 

 fhera nigrociliata. Near creeks which run up into the Padauk bearing tracts LicuaJa 

 peltata and spinosa are found. In typical Padauk forests generally a dense under- 

 wood 10-30 ft. high of shade-bearing shrubs. 

 P. 240. P. J^Iarsupium. Santal Parganas. Singbhum. 



„ 242. Derris scandens. Bengal. 



„ „ D. canarensu, Baker ; Cooke, Bombay Flora I. 406 probably is D. oblonga^ Benth. 

 P. 243. D. marginata. Chittagong. 



„ „ Add : 21 Derris ptaclxra, Gage in Eecords Bot. Survey India III. 49. Arakan 

 Yoma. Minbu district. 

 P. 243. Pongamia glabra. Andamans. 



„ „ Add : Onnosia tavoyana, Prain in Journ. As. Soo. Beng. LXXIII. 46. Yern. 

 Talaing-zin^ Burm. Tavoy. Leaflets 4-6 in. long, ovate- lanceolate, pod brown 

 polished, 2-3 in. long, seed scarlet. 

 P. 244. Sophora Bakeri. Singbhum. 



„ „ Add:Dal3iOTisieabracteata,E-G^3:ah. Ass?im. Billwt (Gojmri). Kaga hills. Cachar. 

 Chittagong. A large shrub, erect or scandent, 1. rigid, ovate or elliptic, base some- 

 times slightly peltate, pet. 1-4, blade 4-12 in. FL terminating the long bracteate 

 branches of an axillary inflorescence, bracts and bracteoles in pairs, opposite, nearly 

 orbicular, ^ in. diam., the bracteoles enclosing the buds. Corolla white, longer than 

 bracteoles, "stamens 10, free. Pod SxlJ in., seeds 1-3. D. paitcisperma, Griff, 

 Kotulae lY. 445 ; Ic. PI. As. t. 608, Assam is similar and perhaps identical. Accord- 

 ing to Griffith D. bracteata has persistent stipules and a 1-seeded pod, D. paucisperma 

 deciduous stipules and 1-3 seeds. A closely allied species, JD. africana, S. Moore, 

 grows in tropical Africa. 

 P. 246. CcBsalpinia Bonducella. Yern. Gataran, Jabalpur. 



