but they certainly suggest that Neoscortechinia is more 
likely to be the correct genus than Baccaurea* 
4. Our herbarium sheet of tree No*326 in Weld Hill 
is missing (do you by any chance have our sheet ?) but 
I am trying to locate the tree again. 
5. As regards tT tampoi Tt , I think the position is more or le 
less this - Malays group our species roughly into three 
groups - 
Those with rather large fruits are called tampoi 
(or some variant^), those with smaller fruits in pendulous 
racemes from the branches or trunk are called rambai (or 
k 
some variant/), and those with fruits of the small dejplscent 
i * 
type are commonly called jintek2 . 
6 . I am told that taban ( not tabau ]) is the equivalent 
of tampoi in Temerioh district and possibly elsewhere in 
Pahang. In these localities Palaquium Gutta is distinguished 
as getah taban. 
7. Of tampoi two forms are said to be recognised - 
t ampoi tungau is red iru^side the pericarp and the fruits 
lo-wv# 
are towards the branch ends; tampoi larah is white inside and 
cauliflorus. 
8 . B. lanceolata appears to be an exception as it is called 
mempaung . 
9. B. Griff ithii and B. reticulata are certainly called 
tampoi but we also have recorded the following under this 
-r 
name although their fruits are smaller - B.pyglformis Gage., 
• • 
B.braoteolata Mull- Arg. , B. velutina Ridl. and B.polyneura 
Hook.f. 
10. Strugnell mentioned before he went on leave that 
c 
you had been enquiring about Ghukrasia.^fabularis Juss. is 
T 
wild in the Peninsula and quitecommon in some places. The 
X 
* 
tree that Ridley called 0. tabular is (Alvins Malacca specimens 
called suntang and S. put eh ) is Melia integrifoliola Merr . 
(= AzadiBachta integrifoliola Merr.) It is described 
