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ACACIA LONGI FOLIA Willd. Sydney wattle. 
The commercial extract was repellent to the Japanese beetle.— 
Metzger and Grant (277 ). 
ACACIA NILOTICA (L.) Willd. Synonyms: A. arabica (Lam.) Willd.; 
A. scorpioides (L.) W. F. Wight. Babool tree. 
The leaves mixed with coconut oil were applied externally in cases 
of itch.— Drury ( 122 , p. 5). 
ACACIA PENNATA Willd. 
ACACIA PRUIMiSCEwS Kurz. 
ACACIA SALICINA Lindl. 
Extracts of the leaves and bark of these fish-poison plants from 
Australia and Burma were nontoxic to the bean aphid. — Tattersfield and 
Girainriiam (391) . 
ACACIA. SENEGAL Willd. 
Various gums were tested with oils to find stable emulsifiers. 
Arabic gum was efficient.— Ginsburg ( 168) . ^This gum might also have been 
obtained from Acacia nilotica /| 
ACACIA sp. 
Acacia rum was unstable. — Ginsburg ( 158 ). 
ALBIZZIA PPOCERA (Roxb.) Benth. 
ALBIZZIA STIPULATA (Roxb.) Boiv. 
These species were used as fish poisons and insecticides in 
India.— Roark ( 332 , p. 2). 
Extracts of the leaves and bark of these fish-poison plants from 
Inaia wore nontoxic to the be«n aphid. — Tattersfield and Girnimjhan ( 591 ) . 
DICliROSTACiiYS CIHi^KEA Wight & Am. Synonym: Limosa cinerea L. 
In India the leaves mixed with corn were riven to horses to free 
them of bots and worms .--Watt (422, v. 3, p. 109). 
