120 G. King — Materials for a Flora of the Malayan Peninsula. [No. 2. 



Penang, Curtis, 800, 1534. Perak ; King's Collector, Scortechini. 

 Wo specimen that I have seen has female flowers showing anything 

 besides the ovary. Complete female flowers are much wanted. 



4. Hydnocarpus Scortechinii, King n. sp. A tree, all parts except 

 the sepals glabrous. Branchlets pale brown when dry, angular. Leaves 

 sub-sessile, coriaceous, shining on both surfaces, slightly inequilateral, 

 elliptic or elliptic-oblong, tapering to the acuminate apex, the edges slight- 

 ly recurved when dry ; the base rounded, slightly unequal ; nerves 7-8 

 pairs, thin, spreading ; the reticulations minute and distinct on both 

 surfaces : length 5 to 7 in., breadth 2'5 to 3"5 in., petiole about "2 in. 

 Cymes small, monoecious, axillary or extra- axillary, on the young branches, 

 about three times as long as the petioles, densely bracteolate, 2-3 branch- 

 ed. Male flowevs on pedicels "75 in. long. Sepals elliptic, blunt, their 

 ajjices incurved, puberulous. Petals smaller than the sepals but of the 

 same shape ; the gland nearly as long, linear. Anthers narrow, elongate ; 

 filaments short, conical. Ovary none. Female flowers like the males, 

 but on short pedicels and the stamens barren ; ovary ovoid below, its 

 upper half cylindric, ridged, pale-coloured, glabrous ; stigmas large 

 fleshy, reflexed, shortly bifid. Fruit (young) ovoid, minutely rugose, 

 glabrous. 



Dinding Islands ; Scortechini, Curtis. 



This species bears a general resemblance to H. Curtisii. But it differs 

 from that species in having broader leaves on shorter petioles, much 

 broader and shorter petals, and a glabrous ovary. Ripe fruit of this is 

 unknown. 



5. Htdnocarpus cucurbitina, King, n. sp. A tree 60 to 80 feet high ; 

 very young branches and leaves with minute ferruginous mealy tomen- 

 tum ; otherwise glabrous. Leaves thinly coriaceous, slightly inequilateral 

 and contacted at the base on one side, elliptic-oblong, tapering to either 

 end, the apex with a short rather blunt acumen, the edge very slightly 

 recurved when dry ; both surfaces, but especially the lower, shining and 

 with the transverse veins and minute reticulations very distinct ; main 

 nerves 5 to 6 pairs, sub-erect, thin ; length 3'5 to 5 in., breadth l - 5 to 

 2*25 in., petiole "25 in. Cymes diceceous, (the female flowers few) 

 axillary, three times as long as the petioles, bracteolate, 3 to 6-branched. 

 Male flowers on pedicels "35 in. long, about "3 in. in diam. Sepals broad- 

 ly ovate, blunt, pubescent-tomentose externally. Petals ovate-rotund, 

 glabrous, thin, each with a fleshy scale with white ciliate edges and 

 nearly as large as itself. Anthers ovate-cordate, glabrous ; the filaments 

 short, conical ; Ovary rudimentary, sericeous. Female flowers like the 

 males, but on slightly shorter pedicels and with smaller barren stamens- 

 Ovary cyclindric, densely sericeous-tomeutose : stigmas elongate, fleshy, 



