Urticaceae. Platanacete. Juglandere. 
348 
— Seed some distance from the incision, placed about the 
middle of the fr. Ls. larger than in the last (12—15 cm), 
more or less long and suddenly acuminate, doubly 
toothed, the double teeth bent in the form of a sickle, 
rough above, more or less short-pubescent underneath. 
Stas gen. 5—6. U. major Sm.—As the last, apparently 
commoner. 3; rather earlier . . montana With. 1965. 
509. Celtis. Celtis. V, 128. 
1. Ls oblong-lanceolate, acuminate, toothed. FIs solitary 
in the 1.-axils.—Transalpine Switz.; Simplon (Gondo). 3,4 
australis L. 1966. 
510. Morus. Mulberry. XXI, 16. 
1. False berries whitish, sometimes tinted with red on one 
side, with a sweet insipid flavour. Ls soft; with only 
one principal ramification from the base of the middle 
nerve on each side. 5 . . . f alba L. 1967. 
— False berries black, larger, with a sweet-acid flavour. 
Ls harder, with 2 principal ramifications on each side 
from the base of the middle nerve. 5 f nigra L. 1968. 
511. Ficus. Fig. XXI, 16. 
1. Ls heart-shaped at the base, palmatilobed or undiv., 
rough.—Rocky places; W. T. at least subspontaneous. 4 
Carica L. 1969. 
97. Platanaceae. 
512. Platanus. Plane. XXI, 16. 
1. Branches fairly erect. Ls pentagonal, indistinctly lobed, 
covered underneath with a gen. persistent pubescence, 
the base gen. cordate or truncate, never cuneiform.— 
An ornamental tree originally from ^.America. 5 
f occidentalis L. 1970. 
*— Branches spreading. Ls deeply 5-lobed or 5-fid, the lobes 
acute or acuminate, often slightly toothed, becoming 
glabr. underneath, the base cuneiform or (b. cicerifolia 
Willd.) truncate or slightly cordate.— An ornamental 
tree originally from the East. . f orientalis L. 1971. 
98. Juglandese. 
513. Juglans. Walnut. XXI, 6. 
1. Leaflets 5 — 9 (gen. 7), oblong or oblong-oval, acute or 
acuminate, almost entire. —Cultivated. 5 f regia L. 1972. 
