184 
apical mesocarp caverns, and the massive endo- 
carp filling 5/6 of the interior. The related 
P. spiralis R. Br., described from the Wellesley 
Group, Gulf of Carpentaria, Queensland, has 
the phalanges with 16-22 carpels, the apical 
mesocarp caverns contiguous and l A as long as 
the phalange; and the endocarp Vz as long as 
the phalange and consisting of narrow, mostly 
separate bands. 
The type locality is listed by Fitzgerald (1918: 
220) as Dillen’s Springs, spelled with an apos- 
trophe. The locality is about 47 mi. south of 
Wyndham in East Kimberley and at approxi- 
mately 16° S., 128° E. 
The collector of the specimen from Escape 
Cliffs was published by Bentham (1878: 149) 
as Hulls. This was an error. The collector’s name 
was really W. Hulse, as indicated by F. von 
Mueller (1869: 20). 
PACIFIC SCIENCE, Vol. XV, April 1961 
REFERENCES 
Bentham, George, and Ferdinand von 
Mueller. 1878. Flora of Australia. L. Reeve 
& Co., London. 7 : xii + 806. 
Blake, S. T. 1954. Botanical contributions of 
the Northern Australia Regional Survey, II. 
Studies on miscellaneous northern Australian 
plants. Austral. Jour. Bot. 2: 99-140, fig. 1, 
pi. 1-7. 
Fitzgerald, William Vincent. 1918. The 
botany of the Kimberleys, north-west Aus- 
tralia. R. S. Western Austral. Jour. Proc. 3: 
102-224. 
Martelli, U. 1926. A new species of Pandanus 
from north-west Queensland. R. S. Queens- 
land Proc. 38: 57-58, pi. 11. 
Mueller, F. von. 1869. Report of the Govern- 
ment Botanist and Director of the Botanic 
Garden, for 1868. Government Printer, Mel- 
bourne. Pp. 1-21. 
NOTES ON THE SECTION FOULLIOYA 
In the preceding Part 1, the section Foullioya It should be inserted as follows, on p. 3, replace 
Warb. was listed but was omitted from the key. the second D, by: 
D. Stigmas narrower than apex of drupe, 
a. Stigmas lunate, lateral under a horizontal coriaceous, entire or lobed visor borne 
asymmetrically on the apical region of the drupe but not marginal; syn- 
carp solitary, cylindric, enwrapped in boat-shaped colored bracts; staminate 
flowers unknown _ May sops 
a. Stigmas deeply 2 -lobed, tonguelike or reniform and 2 -lobed, terminal, ascendings 
arcuate; syncarps several, globose to broad ellipsoid, with a single bract, 
exposed; stamens few, fascicled 
The genus Fouilloya Gaud., when published 
in 1841, contained illustrations of the two fol- 
lowing species: 
First, F. maritima Gaud. It was suggested by 
Brongniart (Ann. Sci. Nat. Bot. VI, 1: 291, 
1875), that the type of this came from Mada- 
gascar or Mauritius. Later, Vaughan and Wiehe 
(Linn. Soc. Bot. J. 55: 20, 1953), report no 
living species on Mauritius that agrees with it 
and no evidence that it previously existed there. 
It has not been rediscovered elsewhere, but all 
its close relatives are native to Madagascar. It 
was renamed Pandanus maritimus Solms (1878), 
at apex of column.. Foullioya 
but this is a later homonym of P. maritimus 
Thouars (1808). So, this species has not been 
rediscovered since its publication in 1841, its 
homeland is unknown, and the specific epithet 
is unavailable in Pandanus. 
Second, F. racemosa Gaud. Solely upon this 
was founded Pandanus racemosus Kurz (1869). 
It has not been rediscovered, and is known only 
from the Gaudichaud illustration and his speci- 
men. Its homeland is unknown, but its relatives 
occur in Madagascar. 
The group was first validly published as the 
section Foullioya (as Fouilloya ) by Warburg 
