22 Gr. King— Materials for a Flora of the Malayan Peninsula . [No. 1, 
breadth 1-75 to 4 in.; petiolules *2 to *5 in., the terminal one P5 to 2’5 
in. Panicles with few short branches, slender, 3 to 5 in. long, few- 
flowered, lax. Flowers *25 in. long ; the pedicels about as long, slender, 
pubernlous. Calyx cupular, less than half as long as the petals, with 
5 shallow broad sub-acute teeth, puberulous. Petals narrowly elliptic, 
longer than the staminal tube. Staminal tube cylindric, not ventricose, 
ridged, glabrous, its mouth with ten subulately bifid teeth : anthers 
ovate with broad bases, included. Ovary cylindric, tapering into the 
short style ; stigmas radiating, their apices recurved. Fruit unknown. 
Perak: Wray No. 3345; King’s Collector No. 6001. Singapore: 
Ridley No. 4822. 
This differs from the other three species in its stigmas which unite 
to form a radiate discoid mass, the edges being recurved ; while the other 
three species have erect slender un-united stigmas. 
2. Sandoricum Maingayi, Hiern in Hook. fll. FI. Br. Ind. I, 554. 
A tree. Leaves 6 to 8 in. long : leaflets elliptic, sub-glabrous, sub-acu¬ 
minate, the base obtuse or sub-acute; main nerves 6 to 8 pairs, de¬ 
pressed on the upper, prominent on the lower surface, spreading; length 
2 to 5 in., breadth 1'5 to 3 in. ; petiolules *35 in., the terminal one 1*25 
to 175 in. Panicles shorter than the leaves, lax, puberulous. Floivers 
*35 to '45 in. long, their pedicels of about the same length; bracteoles 
minute, subulate. Calyx fleshy, obscurely toothed, minutely pilose. 
Petals three times as long as the calyx, fleshy, elliptic, blunt, glabrous. 
Staminal-tube cylindrical, ventricose in the upper half, ridged; the mouth 
with 10 bifid teeth. Stigmas erect, rather long. Fruit unknown. 
C. DeCand. Mem. Phan. I, 462. 
Malacca; Maingay (Kew Distrib. No. 328). 
I have seen only Maingay’s Malacca specimens. They resemble 
S. borneense, Miq ., of which I have seen the type specimen; but that 
species has narrower and longer leaflets with more numerous lateral 
nerves ; it has also smaller flowers. 
Mr. Hiern describes this as a tree, M. C. DeCandolle as a shrub. 
3. Sandoricum emarginatum, Hiern in Hook. fll. FI. Br. Ind. I, 553. 
A tree. Leaves 5 to 7 in. long; leaflets obovate to elliptic, the apex 
emarginate and usually mucronate, slightly narrowed to the oblique 
base ; main nerves 5 to 6 pairs, spreading, slightly prominent; length 
2 to 35 in., breadth 1*25 to 2 in., petiolules *35 to ’5 in., the terminal 
one 1 to P25 in. Panicles short, dense; flowers '2 in. long, shortly pedi¬ 
cellate. Calyx cup-shaped, slightly accrescent. Staminal-tube with 
8 or 10 sub-glabrous emarginate teeth. Fruit (immature) sub-globular 
or obovoid, densely and minutely tomentose. C. DeCand. Mem. Phan. I, 
461. S. Beccarianum , Baill. in Adansonia, 264. 
Malacca: Maingay (Kew T Distrib. No. 331). 
