Page:Illustrations of Indian Botany, Vol. 1.djvu/191

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EXPLANATION OF PLATE 35.

1. Flowering branch of Monocera tuberculata — natural size. 2. A flower forcibly opened, showing the filaments slightly united at the base. 3. Back and front views of the anthers. 4. A detached petal. 5. The ovary surrounded at the base by a ring of glands. 6 and 7. The same cut vertically and transversely.


XXVIII.-DIPTEROCARPEAE.

A small but, to Indian Botanists, highly interesting order being nearly confined to India and her islands. Two species only are noted as of foreign (African) origin. It is prin- cipally composed of large, handsome, fine flowering, trees, abounding in resinous juice. The leaves are alternate, marked with strong parallel veins, running from the midrib to the margin, furnished with deciduous, convolute, stipules, terminating the branches in a point: the racemes, of flowers are either terminal and panicled, or axillary, solitary, or several from the same leaves or from the axils, the flowers often secund.

Calyx persistent, somewhat tubular at the base, 5-lobed, lobes at first slightly unequal, afterwards enlarged, usually two of them much more so than the rest, becoming wing-like, eestiva- tion imbricated. Petals hypogynous free, or slightly combined at the base ; aestivation twisted. Stamens indefinite, distinct, when numerous, attached to a broad somewhat elevated torus, occa- sionally irregularly polyadelphous ; when few, adherent to the base of the petals : filaments dilated at the base : anthers frequently terminating in bristle, or tipped with a gland-like point, 2-celled, opening by terminal fissures. Ovary few (3) celled, with two pendulous ovules in each : Style and stigma simple. Fruit coriaceous, I -celled, by abortion, 3-valved or inde- hiscent, surrounded by the calyx. Seed solitary, without albumen. Cotyledons twisted or crumpled, or unequal, and obliquely incumbent, radicle superior.

Affinities. In its affinities this order certainly claims close relationship with the Elaeo- carpeae, but is yet perfectly distinct, the imbricate aestivation of the calyx, and the spirally con- torted one of the corolla, affording ample grounds for their separation, notwithstanding the great similarity that exists between the stamens and pistils. The spiral aestivation of the corolla and crumpled cotyledons associate it with Malvaceae, but the usually elongated 2 celled anthers, pendulous ovules, and imbricate cestivation of the calyx of Dipterocarpeae, keep them sufficiently distinct. With Guttiferae this order agrees in many points, more especially in its resinous juice, and exalbuminous seed, but is at once distinguished by its stipules, alternate leaves, and the very different aestivation of its corolla. " The enlarged foliaceous unequal segments of the calyx while investing the fruit, point out this family at once" (Lindley) and not less certainly, the inflorescence when in flower.

Geographical Distribution. The species of this order though few in number are yefc spread over every part of India and her islands, from Ceylon and the southern promontory ofj, the Peninsula, they extend northwards nearly to the foot of the Himalayas : and from the coast of Malabar, eastward, through Burmah, Siam, and Cochin- China, to Java. Roxburgh's cata- logue of this order is very full, containing no fewer than 16 species, while Dr. Wallich's has only 19, several of these however were unknown to Roxburgh : whence, I presume, we may assume the number of Indian ones to amount to about 25 species. Blume has 4 from Java, but whether any of these are identical with any of the Indian species, I am not prepared to say, and to determine which, would require a more careful examination than I have the means of giving them. The genus Lophira having two species, both from Sierra Leone, is referred to this order. These are the only species, not of Asiatic origin, belonging to this family. In this neighbourhood (Madras) several species are found, but all natives of the hilly tracts forming the Balaghaut. In Silhet, Chittagong, and Pegue, wher* 3 they abound, they occupy the plains. In Java three, of the 4 species described, are natives of mountain forests, the 4th is found on the sea-shore, and hence has been by Blume called Dipterocarpus littoralis. A Hopea and Vateria India equally approach the coast in Malabar, but the latter is probably not confined to it, since either it, or one