80 
SANDWICH ISLANDS. 
[Terebinthacece. 
Jacq. Ic. liar. 1. t. 130. De Cancl. Prodr. v. 1. p. 493. — W. arborescens. Cav. Diss. 6. 
t. 170. f. 1. 
Upon the same specimen there is frequently a transition from the sessile to the long- peduncleci heads of 
tiowers, and from ovate to oblong leaves. 
Okd. VI. GUTTIFER^. Juss. 
1. Clusia sessilis; floribus axillaribiis solitariis subsessilibus 4-petalis, foliis obovatis ellip- 
ticisque. DC . — “ Forst. Prodr. n. 391.” De Cand. Prodr. v. \. p. 559. 
Our specimens are not in flower, but appear to be the plant of Forster. They were among the Oahu 
Collection, but Mr. Collie has not noticed them in his notes. 
Ord. VII. SAPINDACE^. Juss. 
1. Cardiospermum Halicacabmn. Linn. — De Cand. Prodr. v. 1. jo. 601. 
1. Dodonsea viscosa. Linn. — De Cand. Prodr. v. \.p. 616. — 1). spathulata. Sm. in Bees’ 
Cycl. De Cand. Prodr. 1. jo. 616. 
Ord. VIII. OXALIDE^. Juss. 
1. Oxalis repens. Thunh. — Jacq. Ox. n. 11. t. 78. f. 1. De Cand. Prodr. v. 1. p. 693. 
Our specimens, found at Oneeheow, are neither in flower nor in fruit, and we should have referred them 
to O. cornicidata, but Oaudichaud having mentioned O. repens as a native of the Sandwich Islands, and not 
O. cornicidata, we have retained the above name. 
Ord. IX. ZYGOPHYLLE^. Br. 
1. Tribulus cistoides. Linn. — Jacq. Hort. Schoenbr. t. 103. De Cand. Prodr. v. \. p. 703. 
The juice squeezed from the roots of this plant is employed by the natives as an emetic. Eight full grown 
roots supply enougli for one dose. ( Collie.) 
Ord. X. RHAMNE^. Juss. 
1. Ceanothus Asiaticus. Linn. — Cav. Ic. v. 5. t. 440. 7 ; 1. De Cand. Prodr. v. 2. p. 30. 
— Colubrina Asiatica- Brong. 
deko Ord. XL TEREBINTHACE.®. Juss. 
1. Brunellia Sandivicensis ; foliis oppositis simplicibus oblongis integerriniis supra 
glabris subtus minutissime pubescentibus, racemis simplicibus paucifloris axillaribus. — 
Gaud, in Freyc. Voy.p. 93? (absque descriptione.) • 
Our specimen, found in Oahu, is in a very imperfect state ; still we have little hesitation in believing it to 
be the same with the species noticed by Oaudichaud, and also by Adrien de Jussieu, in his Memoir on the 
liutacem. The young branches, peduncles, and pedicels are pubescent, as also the carpels. In the specimen 
before us, the peduncle has only three flowers, one of which is terminal, and the other two are lateral and 
opposite to each other, all of them pedicellate. Although, foUondng De CandoUe’s Prodromus, we have 
placed this genus in Terebinthacece, Jussieu appears to us to have done right in referring it to the 
llutacea, near Zanthoxylon. 
