380... . RECORDS OF PHE BOTANICAL SURVEY OF INDIA. 
Fruits May—June. Along river banks 3 1,000’-~4,000'. 
93. C. trapezifolium Thw. A. C. 
“In evergreen forest at about 4,000'.” 
- 62. Mesua L. 
94. M. ferrea i. Tamil Suruli ; Pulaiya Atu-ponnai. ; 
Flowers April-May ; fruits Ootoker to December. Common in the : 
evergreen forests from 2,300'—4,500'. The leaves are very variable, as — 
also the size of the flowers and seem to form distinct varieties, as de- : 
"scribed in Bourdiflon’s “ Trees of Travancore.” Of his three varieties I~ 
have found two on the Anamalais. 
Vaz. 1, Flowers 3’—4” in diameter ; leaves long lanceolate, 6’—8” a 
Van 2. Flowers Vi in diameter ; leaves elliptio, sub-candate, 3’—4” 
by ii eae S : 
: 58. Peeciloneuron Beda. 
98. P. indicum Bedd. A.C. 
“in pa ogee forest at about 8 400", of 
XV. TERNSTREMIACER. 
54. Eurya Thunb, 
96. E. japonica Thunb. 
Fruits April—May, Along the edges of <—s 
in open grass lands oo 7,000’, _ Sreen woods and of streams 
55, Cordonia & Elis, 
‘97. G. obtusa Wall. No. 3605. 
Flowers May. In open forest in the = i 
3,800’—4,800’. Often one of the stamens into of ‘evergreen forest ; from 
appears as a linear-oblanceolate petal, which, is “eee and another 
‘rounded at the apex, either Marginate or 
