1896.] G. Kwg^Maieriah for a Flora of f Jie Mahyan Peninsula, 379 
Hook. fiL Fl. Br. lud. 1, 631 ; Kurz For. Flora Burma. I, 262. F. denti- 
eulata, Willd. Nov^. Act. Bt-r. iii 4J7 ; DC. Prodr. H. 38, F. warrrt»/7i«, 
Tfilasiie ill Ann. Sc. Nat. Sev. 4, viii. 123. F. matlraspataiia, Roxb. FL 
Ind. i. 629 ; Cor. PI, i. 55. t. 7d ; Wall. Gat. 4268, in part. W. & A. Prodr. 
164. F. sUhefiariaf Smithiana^ and sutphurea^ Tulasne iii Ann. Sc. Nat. 
Ser. iv-viii. 12o. 
Soiitli Audaman, — Distbio, Throughoafc the bolter parts of India 
and Java. 
Tulasne waa tlie firat to establish V. catyculata as a species, and he 
founded it upon three Indian specimens, viz., Herb. S»racliej and Win- 
tcrbottam No. 349, Wall. Cat, 42G8G. (both from Kamaon) arid Wall. 
Cat. 42G8I1. (from Sylhet). The charactera used by him to dititin- 
guifib F. califcnluta as a species distinct from the older F. Tnadraspatanay 
Gaertn- are that the latter baa more slender aiid more glabrous pnniclesj; 
that tho ovary is less bairj and the styles less divergent ; the wing 
being attached to the base of the fruit in F. madraspatmiay while it spi-inga 
from aLiout tlie middle of it in F. cah/cidafa. TJio last character is the 
one most relied upon ; bat, as regarcL-^ it, I find no degree of constancy. 
I do not think the form named calyculuia deserves rank as more than a 
vainety of typical F. mad/-aspalana Gaertji., the synonymy of which 
(as distinct from this variety) is as follows : Brongn. Mem. sor la Fam. 
des Rhamneos, Ann. So, Kat. for 1827, Ser. I (Vob X) p. 358, t. J 2, fig. 
IV ; W. & A. Prodr. 164 ; Wight Ic. 163 ; Wall. Cat. 4268, in part j Dalz. 
& Gibs. Bomb. Fl. 48; Thwaites Enum. 74; Brandis For. FL 96; Laws, 
in FL Br. Ind. I, 63 U F. hraeteaia^ Wall. Cat. 4269. 
The typical form seems to occar only in Southern India and Ceylon, 
2. Ventilago Maingayi, Laws, in Hook, fiL FL Dr. Ind. I, 631. 
Yonng branches and panicles puberulons. Leaves thinly coriaceous, 
glabitms, oblong or oblong- lanceolate, sab-acute, entire, the bases nar- 
rowed ; main nerves 8 to 11 pairs, spreading ; length 2 5 to 4'5 iti,, 
breadth 1-25 to 1-75 in., petiole '1 to "2 in. Panicles narrow and. spike* 
like, shorter than the leaves when in flower, longer when in fruit; the 
branches very short, distant, cynioBe. Flowers crawded j I in. in diam., 
about as long as their pedicels. Calyso pubemlous outside, glabrous 
inside, the keels of its lobes very bold- Disc pubescent. Ovat-y glab- 
rous. Fruit gi-eenisb-yellow, glabroas ; the nut '25 to '35 in, in diara. ; 
the wing blunt, 1-nerved, mottled with red, 3 to 3'5 in« Jong and about 
'6 in. broad, Kur« For. Flora Burma, I, 263, 
Malacca ; Maingay ( Kew Dist.) No. 407 ; King's Colleefcor, No. 7721. 
DiSTRiB. Tenasserim P Cambodia ! 
A species easily recognised by its elongated entii-e thinly coriaceous 
leaves, and long- winged glabrous fruit. Tenasserim is given as a loeal- 
