302 
CAPPARIDE^. 
5. Cappabis sepiabia Linn. var. gbandifolia Kurz Mss. ex Prain, Jour. 
As. Soc., Beng., lix, Pt. 2, p. 275. 
Table Island; Great Coco; Little Coco. Very common everywhere 
in the group, both on ridges and flat land. 
Diamond Island (Arracan) ; Andamans; Java; Bali; Madura. 
6. Cappabis tbneea Dalz. var. latifolia H. f. and T. (C. oxyphylla 
Wall.) 
Table Island; Great Coco; Little Coco. Very common everywhere 
in the group, but only on ridges. 
Tenasserim; Andamans (Middle Island and South Island). 
VIOLACE^. 
7. Alsodeia bengalensis Wall. 
Table Island; Great Coco; Little Coco. One o£ the commonest 
undershrubs in the group. 
Silhet, rare; Martaban, frequent; Andamans, very common every¬ 
where ; Nicobars, very rare. 
GUTTIFERJE. 
8. Gaecinia ? sp. 
Great Coco. 
An altogether doubtful plant represented by one leaf specimen 
among the plants collected by Mr. Kurz in 1866 ; nothing resembl¬ 
ing it was met with in 1889 or 1890. Mr. Kurz did not himself 
collect in Great Coco. A deputation that visited the island while 
he was at Port Blair brought him a few specimens; there may even be 
some confusion as to the locality—the deputation visited Narcondani 
and elsewhere as well as the Cocos. 
9. Calophtlltjm inophtllum Linn. 
Little Coco. In beach-forests on shingle behind the sea-face vege¬ 
tation, not common. 
Shores of India Andamans, Kicobars, Burma, Malaya, Polynesia, 
Australia, and E. African islands. 
DIPTEROCARPE^. 
10. Diptebocaepus pilosus Roxb. ? 
Great Coco; eastern coast, inland from Ford Bay, common. Only 
leaf specimens obtained and it is not impossible that they may belong to 
D. Ori^thii, Miq. 
112 
