1890.] G. King — Materials for a Flora of the Malayan Peninsula. 185 



374, and 379. ill. sclerophylla, Thwaites Eniim. 407; Beddome I.e., 

 xxiii. M. Nagana, Gard. in Oalc. Journ. Nat. Hist, vii, 4. 



In all the Provinces. Distrib. Eastern and Southern provinces 

 of British India ; Ceylon: often cultivated. 



A variable species to which many names have been given. A form 

 with narrow leaves ('5 in. broad) and small flowers is found in Ceylon, 

 and was distinguished by Thwaites as var. angustifolia (M. salicina, 

 PI. and TriL). In other forms from Ceylon and the South of India, the 

 leaves have very little of the characteristic white waxy powder on their 

 under surfaces ; and these formed the bases of Plauchon and Triana's 

 species M. pulchella, and of Wight's M. G oromancleliana. 



2. Mesua lepidota, T. Anders, in Hook. fil. PI. Br. Ind. I, 288. 

 A slender glabrous tree, 60 to 80 feet high ; the branches pale brown, 

 the youngest minutely rugose when dry. Leaves coriaceous, shiniug, 

 narrowly elliptic or oblong-lanceolate, the apex shortly acuminate, the 

 base acute ; lower surface pale, nerves indistinguishable but the midrib 

 prominent on both surfaces; length 2 to 3 in., breadth "75 to 1*2 in., 

 petiole '15 in. Floivers unknown. Fruit solitary, terminal, pedicellate, 

 broadly ovoid or depressed-globular when young, slightly pointed when 

 mature, apiculate, 1 in. or more in diam., subtended at the base by the 

 4 lignified sub-rotund spreading sepals : pericarp thick, woody, rugulose, 

 dehiscing vertically by 2 (rarely 3) pointed valves. Seeds two, plano- 

 convex, or one depressed-globose ; the testa brown, brittle ; pedicels 

 1 to 1'5 in. long, thickened upwards, and with several minute subulate 

 deciduous bracts at their bases. 



Malacca; Griffith (Kew Distrib. No. 845). Perak ; Scortechini, 

 No. 183 6 , King's Collector, Nos. 4551 and 5881. 



It is suggested in Fl. Br. Ind. (I, 278) that Griffith's No. 845, 

 although now put with Mesua, is probably the type of a new genus 

 between Kayea and Mesua. Griffith's specimens have no flowers, and 

 unfortunately neither have those of the Perak collectors. The latter 

 appear to belong to the same plant as Griffith's ; but their leaves are 

 rather smaller, the branchlets more slender, and the pericarp slightly 

 thinner. It may therefore be found, when fuller material is forthcoming, 

 that there are two species here, and that neither belongs to Mesua. 



Order XV. TERNSTRffiMIACE^E. 



Shrubs rarely climbing, or trees. Leaves alternate, simple (in 

 Indian species) entire or often serrate, usually coriaceous, exstipulate. 

 Floivers handsome, seldom small, usually subtended by 2 sepal-like 

 bracts, rarely diclinous, axillary, 1 or more together, rarely in lateral or 

 terminal racemes or panicles. Sepals 5, rarely 4-7, free or slightly con- 



