Canarium.] 
XXXIV. BURSERACEiE. 
375 
9 to 12 in. long; leaflets 5 to 7 coriaceous elliptic or oblong, abruptly 
blunt acuminate, entire, base rounded or slightly narrowed, glabrous 
except midrib; nerves 10 to 13 pairs beneath, reticulations distinct, 
3'5 to 4'5 in. long, i'25 to 2 in. wide; petiolules -6 in. long, terminal 
one 1-5 in. long. Panicles (male) terminal 12 in. long; branches 
2 to 5 in. long spreading; rachis angled tomentose. Flower-buds 
small globose crowded at branch end. Calyx cup-shaped entire. 
Petals deltoid much larger 1 in. long tomentose outside. Stamens 
6 shorter on the outside edge of a cushion-like disc; anthers oblong 
as long as the free filaments. Drupe ellipsoid 1 in. long, -6 in. 
through. Hab. Malacca (Maingay). Pahang, Bentong Gabing 
(Fox worthy). 
(13) C. secundum Benn. l.c. i. 532; King, Lc. 250. C. 
Bennettii Engler Mon. p. 119. 
Tree 20 to 30 ft. tall, xo to 15 in. through. Branchlets slender 
rusty-tomentose. Leaves 12 to 18 in. long; leaflets 7 to 9, thin, 
coriaceous oblong caudate-acuminate, minutely serrate-dentate or 
sub-entire, base rounded to cuneate glabrous except midrib above, 
hairy beneath ; nerves 10 to 15 elevate beneath, 3 to 6 in. long, 
i-6 to 2 in. wide; petiolules '2 to -3 tomentose, terminal one 1 to 
2 in. long. Stipules reniform tomentose outside *35 in, long, *5 in. 
wide. Panicles slender terminal pendulous 10 to 18 in. long; 
branches remote 2 to 6 in. long. Flowers sub-sessile in terminal 
heads white tinted pink or dark pink. Bracts numerous. Calyx 
lobes broad brown. Petals oblong sub-acute tomentose outside. 
Stamens 6; anthers longer than free; filaments, outside disc. 
Drupe elongate ovoid trigonous acute, 2 in. long, 1 in. through. 
Hab. Woods common, Singapore (Wailich); Garden Jungle. Johor, 
Sedenah. Malacca, Bukit Batu Serudang (Derry). Perak, Goping 
and Gunong Bubu (Kunstler). Penang, Batu Feringhi. Native 
names: Damar Kijai; Kasumba; Kasumbi. 
Excluded and Doubtful Species 
Canarium commune Linn. Introduced from the Moluccas in 1796 
by Christopher Smith, and planted as a roadside tree occa¬ 
sionally in the towns. 
Canarium glaucum Bl. King, lx. 491. The only specimens given 
here by King are also given for C. purpurascens Benn. 
C. littorale Bl. Bijdr. 1164. In Kunstler’s collection (Perak 
2000 to 2500 ft. altitude, Larut No. 6998) is a fruiting speci¬ 
men of a large-leafleted glabrous tree with a rather long fruit, 
2 in. long in a large calyx cup. King refers it to C. parvifolium, 
which it cannot be. It closely resembles C. littorale Bl. of 
Java, but the single specimen is insufficient to be certain of. 
