78 Gr. King— Materials for a Flora of the Malayan Peninsula. [No. 1, 
25. Aglaia macrostigma, King, n. sp. A tree 40 to 60 feet liigh; 
young branches very stout, lenticellate, puberulous. Leaves 2‘5 to 
4 feet long, unequally pinnate, the petioles very long, *3 in. thick, and, 
like the rachises petiolules and inflorescence, covered with minute brown 
scales ; leaflets 15 to 17, the pairs opposite or nearly so, membranous, ellip¬ 
tic to elliptic-oblong, slightly oblique, shortly and sharply acuminate, the 
base rounded; upper surface everywhere glabrous, the lower glabrous, the 
midrib and nerves rugulose and minutely scaly : main nerves 12 to 20 
pairs, depressed on the upper surface, very prominent on the lower; length 
5 to 10 in., breadth 2 to 4 in., petiolules *5 to '7 in. Panicles axillary, 
solitary, about 12 in. long (including the long peduncle), the branches 
rather short, many-flowered. Flowers broadly obovoid, about '08 in. 
long, on short stout rusty-tomentose pedicels. Calyx half as long as the 
corolla, cup-shaped, the mouth with 4 unequal broad valvate teeth, 
rusty-stellate-tomentose externally. Petals 5, glabrous, imbricate, the 
two external longer and orbicular, the 3 inner smaller and elliptic. 
Staminal tube shorter than the petals, cupular, the mouth wide and with 
8 to 10 lanceolate teeth; anthers 7 or 8, large, elliptic, much exserted. 
Ovary depressed, 3 angled, 3-celled, yellowish-pubescent, crowned by a 
glabrous erect fleshy deeply-fluted 3-angled stigma. Fruit elliptic- 
obovoid, narrowed to a short pseudo-stalk, covered with minute pale 
scales, 1*5 in. long, and l in. in diam. 
Perak: King’s Collector, Nos. 6531, 6919, 7559. 
Like A. heteroclita , King, this species has more than 5 stamens, 
and it has a larger stigma than is usually found in Aglaia. Its inflore¬ 
scence is quite that of Aglaia , as also is its fruit. 
26. Aglaia heteroclita, King, n. sp. A tree 30 to 40 feet high, 
glabrous except the inflorescence and under surfaces of the leaves. 
Leaves 18 to 30 in. long, equally or unequally pinnate : leaflets thinly 
coriaceous, 8 or 9 to 10 or 11, distant, alternate, oblong to elliptic- 
oblong, oblique, more or less acuminate, the base cuneate and oblique : 
both surfaces dull and pale when dry (especially the lower), the 
upper glabrous, the lower with sparse minute rusty stellate scales ; main 
nerves 12 to 16 pairs, spreading, faint on the upper, and only slightly 
conspicuous on the lower surface; length 4 to 7 in., breadth P5 to 
2‘75 in. ; petiolules *35 to *75 in., slender. Panicles axillary or terminal, 
2*5 to 6 in. long, stout, the branches not divaricating, the ultimate 
branchlets minutely bracteolate, densely flowered. Flowers '125 in. 
long, sub-globular, on thick^pedicels shorter than themselves and with a 
spongy epidermis. Calyx fleshy, corrugated, conspicuously pellucid- 
dotted, deeply divided into 5 broad rounded imbricated concave lobes. 
Petals 5, somewhat longer than the calyx and thinner, not dotted, ellip- 
