Botany of Southern India. 43 



Crotalaria dubia, (Graham). A'naimalais teak-forests. 

 Crotalaria humifusa, (Graham). A'naimalais, 5,000 

 feet elevation. 



Crotalaria priestleyoides, (Benth. in Hook. Herb.) 

 A'naimalais, 5,000 feet elevation. 



Crotalaria multiflora, (Benth.). A'naimalais, 5000 

 feet. 



Crotalaria triquetra, (Dalzell). A'naimalais, 3,000 to 

 5,000 feet 



Smithia setulosa, (Dalzell). Wyndd. 



Smithia capitata, (Dalzell). A'naimalais, Coimbatore 

 hills. 



Desmodium ormocarpoides, (D C.) A'naimalai teak 

 forests. 



Desmodium podacarpum, var. Gardneri. A'naimalais, 

 in moist woods, (2,000 feet) 



Desmodium botuloides, (R. H. B.) branched from the 

 base, stems angled adpresso-sericeous, leaves oblong acumi- 

 nate glabrous above copiously adpresso-sericeous and pale 

 beneath, 3 J to 4 inches long by 1J to If broad, 2 large 

 scariose lanceolate acuminate stipules at the base of the 

 petiole — 2 filiform stipels on the petiole a little below the 

 leaf, racemes terminal minutely glandular pubescent pedicels 

 short 2-3 together from lanceolate bracts, pedicels and calyx 

 strigose, calyx 2 lipped upper lip ovate very slightly bifid at 

 the apex lower deeply 3 cleft, legume linear 4 to 5 inches 

 long gianduloso — hispid, 6-8 articulated, notched on both 

 sutures, articulations long sub-elliptic. A'naimalais, in moist 

 woods, up to 4000 feet 



Vigna Wightii, (Benth.) A'namalais, Wyndd, Common. 

 Milletia. I have two new species, one from the Wyn^d 



