THE PHILIPPINE JOURNAL OF SCIENCE | PAUL C! FREER, D, Pa Dz -— 4 s.; F. W. FOXWORTHY. Pu. D.- C. B. ROBINSON, Pu. D.; H. N. WHITFORD, Pu. D. ice BUREAU OF cache: .. OF THE GOVERNMENT OF THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. CONTENTS. No. 1, March, 1911. Robinson, C. B. Philippine Urticaceae (concluded) Ames, O. Notes on Philippine Orchids with Descriptions of New Species, Tir Kiikenthal, G. Conspectus Cyperacearum Insularum Philippinensium: Cyperaceae-Caricoid No. 2, June, 1911. Copeland, E. B. Papuan Ferns Collected by the Reverend Copland King.... Robinson, C. B. Philippine Hats........ No. 3, July, 1911. - Copeland, E. B. Bornean Ferns Collected by ©. J. Brooks Copeland, E. B. New or Interesting Philippine Ferns, V..................-----2.---- Foxworthy, F. W. Philippine Gy perms Foxworthy, F. W. Bedaru and Billian: Two Important Borneo Timber Trees Radlkofer, L. Sapindaceae Novae Philippinarum Insulae Polillo............... Robinson, C. B. Botanical Notes upon the Island of Polillo...................-..--...- No. 4, September, 1911. Beceari, O. The Palms of the Island of Polillo Foxworthy, F. W. Philippine Dipterocarpaceae Gamble, J. S. A New Species of Schizostachyum 5 Robinson, C. B. Urticaceae from the Sarawak Museum Robinson, C. B. Philippine Urticaceae, IT No. 5, November, 1911. Dunn, S. T. Philippine Millettias Robinson, C. B. Alabastra Philippinensia, III No. 6, December, 1911. Copeland, E. B. Cyatheae Species Novae Orientales Radlkofer, L. Simarubacearum Genus Novum Philippi Merrill, E. D. The Philippine Species of Begonia Errata and index 105968——-5 1 Page. Order No, 413. A MANUAL OF PHILIPPINE SILK CULTURE. By CHarves 8. BANkKs. (Publication of the Bureau of Science.) Paper, $0.75 United States currency, postpaid. A Manual of Philippine Silk Culture is a practical guide to the cultivation of the silkworm in the Tropics. 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Introduction; general and geographical information regarding Negros ........ 9 Mountains, rivers, and climate ll The sugar-producing districts of Negros 14 History of sugar production in Negros; varieties of cane grown in Negros; cane diseases and insect enemies; nationality of the planters; native labor; difficulties, past and present 16 The soil of Negros compared with that of other sugar-producing countries.. 68 Average composition of the purple or native sugar cane in Negros; other varieties of cane grown in Negros; cane in the Hawaiian Islands; Egyptian cane; Java cane; Louisiana cane; West Indian cane; Negros as compared with other countries in respect to the quality of cane; desirability of introducing other varieties of cane 76 The cultivation of sugar cane and the production of sugar as carried on at the present time in Negros; preparation of the soil; preparation of the seed; planting; cultural operations after planting; cultivation of ratoon canes; period of growth of the cane; cost of cultivation; cutting the cane; transporting the cane to the mill; cost of cutting the cane and transporting it to the mill . 82 Manufacture of sugar from the cane; extraction of the juice; manufacture of sugar from the juice; quality of the — produced in Negros; cost of manufacture; transportation and sale of the sugar; estimate of aver- age cost of same 92 Quantitative experiments to determine the weight of sugar produced from a given weight of cane 114 ponte, Omen ok production: cn er ee ee 123 Possibilities for improvement; in cultivation; in manufacture; advantages of a change to modern methods of manufacture; the future of Negros; summary; appendix; an investigation to discover if diseases of the sugar cane exist in Negros —...00.0000... “ 126 Index Bie 143 - NOTE.—Orders should be sent to the Business Manager, Philippine Journal of Science, Manila, or to any of the below-listed agents. Please give Order Number. FOREIGN AGENTS. r! N. W., Germany. Messrs. Kelley & Walsh, Limited, 32 Raffles Place, Singapore, Straits Settlements. Messrs, A. M. & J. Ferguson, 19 Baillie Street, Colombo, Ceylon. CIRCULARS AND DESCRIPTIVE MATTER SENT ON APPLICATION. Order No. 411. -INDO-MALAYAN WOODS. By Frep W. FoxwortHy. (Being Section C, No. 4, Vol. IV, of the Philippine Journal of Science.) 182 pages, 9 photographic plates. Price $0.50 United States currency, postpaid. TABLE OF CONTENTS. J. Introduction. a. Erroneous popular notions with regard to eastern timbers. b. Object of this work. c. Definition of the Indo-Malayan region. d. Review of previous work and acknowledgments. II. Properties of Wood. a. Woods of Tropics and Temperate regions compared. b. Weight and hardness, tables. c. Strength, work of Newton, Gamble and Gardner. d. Odor, color, taste. III. Suitability of different woods for special purposes. a. Enemies of wood. b. Woods exposed to salt water. c. 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Ferguson, ty Bante. ‘Street, ‘Colman’ Govios” _ . eee AND DESCRIPTIVE ‘MATTER SENT ON StF SOAS ION. THE PHILIPPINE JOURNAL OF SCIENCE C. BOTANY - bi ~ : Vou. VI MARCH, 1911 NO. 4 PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE. (Concluded. ) : ‘By C. B. Ropinson. (From the Botanical Section of the Biological Laboratory, Bureau of Science, Manila, P. I.) 10. BOEHMERIA Jacq. . KEY TO THE PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BOEHMERIA. Glomerules axillary. Alternate leaves or one of those of a pair very greatly reduced. Leaves rugose, reticulations conspicuous, stipules persistent. 1. B. bluimei Leaves very thin, not rugose, reticulations intonspicuous, stipules not persistent 2. B. heterophylla Leaves of a pair not very qual ; 3. B. villosa Glomerules spicate, sometimes also axillary. ~ Leaves alternate, spikes paniculately branched..... ip oS oes 4. B. nivea Leaves opposite, spikes simple except in B. celebica: Stipules 8 to 13 mm Jong, ihe usually distin etly exceeding leaves and petioles. = - : Leaves ore sounay Dabaseeas on both surfaces 5. B. ewlsilers Leaves at ee Foner Ekaeoan, not densely pubescent on either surface. Stipules linear-lanceolate, leaves rigid, spikes simple. | 6. B. platyphylla Stipules wider, leaves Jess rigid, spikes usually branched. 7. B. celebica " Stipules 3 to 6 mm long, This is very definitely a woody vine; the Philippine plants identified as P. ' repandus have either this habit, or are at most low, greatly branching shrubs. The tendency of the leaves of Philippine P. repandus is to be wider than as described for that species, they measuring 5.7 to 10.5 em long, 3 to 5.8 em wide, and being nearly uniform in shape are regularly about twice as long as wide. Those of P. succulentus, on the other hand, are from 6.5 to 12.5 cm long, 1.5 to 3 em wide, four times as long as wide: immature leaves showing the same ~ proportions have been omitted in the. measurements of both species; in both, also, much smaller leaves are present on the spikes. The nerves of the leaves of P. succulentus, on one or both sides, more often extend to the base of the acumen, in some cases even into it, less often they vanish before reaching it. The stipules are slightly longer than in P. repandus, about 5 mm, and are not so deeply cut, about half-way to the base, but the margin of difference is slight. The spikes are more often solitary, but sometimes fascicled. Local name: ramee, j 5. Pipturus discolor sp. nov. : ae Scandens: glomerulis spicatis, spicis fasciculatis, quam folia brevior- ibus quam petioli multo longioribus: ramis ramulisque ferrugineo- et - albido-tomentosis dein glabrescentibus ; foliis ovalibus vel anguste oval- ibus, rigidis, subintegris, trinerviis, discoloribus. - Spikes in fascicles of two or three, rarely solitary, 4.5 to 7 cm long, ‘ 16 ROBINSON. the rachises pubescent like the stem; glomerules sessile, paired, the pairs 3 to 4 mm in diamete “up to 5 mm apart, stigmas not inclvded in these measurements: pistillate perianth about 1 mm long, morg,or less pubes- cent, conforming to the shape of the ovary and adnate to it, the apex very shortly and obscureiv 4- or 5-lobed ; stigma 3 to 4 mun pene densely pubescent except at the extreme base, hasiatond A woody vine, wide y branching, the branches terete or toward the apex obscurely obtusely angled, the bark brown, glabre:cent near the base, elsewhere densely covered with short white and,ferzaginous pubes- cence; petioles and lamiz: of leaves variable in length, apparently with- out system, the former 3 to 16 mm long, pubescent like the branches, the lamina coriaceous, rigid, oval or narrowly oval, 4.2 to 12 cm long, 24 to 67 mm wide, the base ‘varying from acute to subcordate, the margins entire or subentire, th: apex merely rounded or short-acuminate, 3- nerved, the nerves extending at least four-fifths of the length of the lamina, often almost to its apex, with numerous anastor~ ‘ng veins connecting the costa and the nerves, conspicuous on the under ‘surface, but with only one or two primary veins and they near the apex, the reticulations slightly pubescent and brownish in color, forming a strong contrast to the dense white tomentum of the interstices, upy er surface of young leaves-pilose, at length glabrous, except on the principal ve‘ns; stipules united for half their length, nearly 4 mm long, white-p. mt, early deciduous. MINDANAO, Lake Lanao, Camp Keithley, Mrs. Clemens 676 (ty e); Dt iet of Davao, Sibulan River, Elmer 11776. Closely allied to P. argenteus (Forst.) Wedd., differing in* the habit,“ che shape, apex, and somewhat in the pubescence of the leaves, and the fe scicled spikes. It is curious that three out of ou six species should be Scaude. . >reas of the eight enumerated by Weddell onl P. rotundifolius (Poir.) W .°. ‘rom Mauritius, is so described; also, that while we have two closely allied species with free stipules, the only other that ap, caches them should also be the ciosest to them in other characters. ‘ Local name (Apo): ramerame. 6. Pipturus argenteus Wedd. in DC. Prodr. 161 (1869) 235. Urtica argentea Forst. Prodr. (1784) 65. LuMBucan Istanp, (near Balabac), Me: 7’ 7185, Phil. Pl. 401 Merr:®?. Sumatra to Australia and the Pacific Islands. 17. OREOCNIDE Mig. Leaves pinnately veined 1. 0. ryb : Leaves distinctly 3-nerved 2. O. trinervis 1. Oreocnide rubescens Mig. Ann. Mus. Lugd.-Bat. 4 (1869) 306. Urtica rubescens Bl. Bijdr. (1825) 506. “Fi. Austral. 6 (1873) 185. PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE. 17 Villebrunea rubescens Bl, Mus, Bot. Lugd.-Bat. 2 (1856) 167. V. frutesceys Merr. in Bull. (Philip.) For. Bur. 1 §1903) 19, non Bl. Mus. Bot. Lugd.-Bat..2 (1856) 168. Luzon, Provi. :e of Tayabas, Lucban, Elmer 9237: Province of Sorsogon, Sor- sogon, Elmer 7313, For. Bur. 10518 Curran. Minporo, Amnay River, For. Bur. 11462 Merritt; Subaan River, For. Bur. 6900, 11380 Merritt. Neraros, Baliw, For, Bur, 11214 »verett ; Mount Canlaon, For. Bur. 17412 Curran. Leyte, Palo, Elmer 7116; Tagloban, For. Bur. 12442 Danao. Minpanao, Subprovince of Bu- tuan, Waloe, Merrill 7285: District of Zamboanga, Tetuan, Ahern 365; Sax River, Williams 2129: Fiake Lanao, Camp Keithley, Mrs. Clemens 59, 334, 338, s. n.: District of Davac. M unb Apo, Ahern 685. The stipules of some of the above are as mugh as 1% or 13 mm long. al With regard to the generic name: Oreocnide Miquel was published on page 39 of “Plantae Junghuhnianae,’ which appeared in March, 1851, according to Flora 34 (21 May 1851) 302, though Miquel himsel* gives the date as 1852, in his later ® claim for the validity of the name. Villebrunea appeared as the generic name of two species in Gaudichaud’s Bot. Voy. Bonite, and has been adopted by Weddell and nearly all subsequent writers. The plates were issued, according t@Weddell, between 1839 and 1846, but were not accompanied by ex- planations or descriptions: the former appeared subsequently, in 1866, too late to affect. the point at issue. The true place of publication must then be that where it was taken up by a subsequent author, namely by Weddell in Ann, Sci. Nat. Bot. IV 1 (1854) 195. Miquel’s name thus has priority. Only the first of Gaadichaud’stplates belongs to the genus as now understood. x Lagal names: liasim (Sorsogon) ; baquidbaquid (Negros) ; alamang (Zamboan- ga) s,gadyyjt (Apo). Java, Celebes. 2. Oreocnide trinervis Miq. Fl. Ind. Bat. 1.* (1859) 270. Villébrinea irinervis Wedd. in Ann, Sci. Nat. Bot. IV 1 (1854) 196. Baranes Istayps, Batan Island, Bur. Sci. 10200 McGregor, For. Bur. 15298 Ajudo. Baspuyanrs Istanps, Babuyan Island, Bur. Sci. 3910 Fénia. Luzon, ss sings fart neo Norte, Bangui, For. Bur. 13855 Merritt & Darling: Province of B ngpe Lusod-Pompon trail, For. }ur. .5767 Curran & Merritt; between Baguio an Sablan, Williams 1466: Proyince of Zambales, Mount Pinatubo, Bur. ‘Sci. 2594 Foxworthy: Province of Bataan, Mount Mariveles and Lamao River, Williams 491, For. Bur. 195 Barnes, For. Bur. 2645, 3001 Meyer, Elmer 6978, For. Bur. 7880 Curran: Province of Rizal, San Isidro, Phil. Pl. 281 Ramos: Province of Laguna, Los Bafios, Hlmer s. n.; Mount Maquiling, For. Bur. 7792 Curran & Merritt, Lijano s..: Province of Tayabas, Cuming 777 (type collection) ; Atimo- nan, Wh+iferd 640; Buenavista Mountain, For, Bur. 10307 Curran. Nereros, Himugnap .River, For. Bur. 4297 Everett. é Local names: kasuy (Batan Island) ; ginderanaon (Tlocos). Formosa. : : : The place of origin of Villebrunea crenulata Gaudich. Bot. Voy. Bonite pl. 92, was doubtfully stated by Weddell, in 1854, to be the Philippines. Although he continued to cite this plate in the generic description of Villebrunea, even in 1869, he reduced the species to his Urera sandwicensis, confining its range to the Hawaiian Islands.™ ; 5 Ann. Mus. Bot. Lugd.-Bat. 4 (1869) 306. : DC. Prodr. 167? (1869) 92, 235.” 100004——2 ; , 18 ROBINSON. 18. DEBREGEASIA Gaudich. Debregeasia angustifolia sp. nov. : D. longifolia Rolfe in Journ. Bot. 23 (1885) 215, et Auct. Philip., non Wedd. in DC. Prodr. 16* (1869) 235. Monoica vel dioica: glomerulis geminatis, pedunculatis; perianthio pistillifero ovarium arcte amplectente sed haud ei adnato, ore valde con- tracto, brevissime dentato, sub fructu baccato achenium laxe continente: foliis alternis, coriaceis, anguste lanceolatis vel anguste oblongo-lanceol- atis ; stipulis lanceolatis vel ovatis, apice bifurcatis, pilosis. More often monoecious with the staminate glomerules toward the apices of the branchlets: peduncles solitary or paired, up to 5 mm long, bracted at the base and with more or less deciduous bracteoles about 1 mm long, pilose, usually once forked, the secondary peduncles very shortly forked at the apex, the glomerules therefore paired and ap- proximate: staminate flowers nearly sessile, somewhat exceeding the triangular-ovate ciliate bracteoles; perianth deeply 4-parted, about 1 mm long, the segments ovate, pilose; anthers about 0.3 mm long: pistillate receptacles 3 to 4 mm in their longer diameter, the pairs together up to 7 ‘mm in diameter; pedicels up to 1 mm long; perianth closely covering the ovary but easily separable from it, about 0.7 mm long, greatly con- tracted and minutely toothed at the apex; stigma penicillate-capitate, subpersistent ; fruiting perianth red, fleshy, up to 1.5 mm long, the achene. hardly longer than the ovary and therefore loosely contained by the ~ perianth. A shrub, 2 to 5 m high, the branchlets and younger parts of the branches densely white- and brown-pilose: leaves alternate, petioles densely pubescent, 2 to 15 mm (usually 6 to 8 mm) long, the lamina coriaceous, narrowly lanceolate or narrowly oblong-lanceolate, 2.5 to 13 em long, 8 to 24 mm wide, the base obtuse or rounded, more often slightly emarginate, the margins except at the extreme base densely serrate, the’ teeth short, obtuse or acute, the apex gradually acuminate ; trinerved, the nerves extending about half the length of the lamina, with 5 to 7 additional conspicuous veins and other very short ones at the apex, the reticulations numerous, conspicuous on the under surface; upper surface rugose, sparsely or somewhat densely pilose, under pilose on the veins and white-.or gray-tomentose between them; stipules lan- ceolate or ovate, 7 mm long, bicarinate, bifurcate, pilose on the forks, keels, between them and the margin, and sometimes also along the middle. Luzon, Province of Abra, Mount Paraga, Bur. Sci. 7106 Ramos: District of Lepanto, Balbalasan, For. Bur. 5695 Klemme; Balili, Merrill 4641: Province of Benguet, Mount Pulog, For. Bur. 18104, 18147 Ourran, Merritt, & Zschokke; . Imogen-Nozo trail, For. Bur. 14198 Merritt; Baguio, Elmer 5922, Topping 112, Williams 1551 (type), Bur. Sci. 5761 Ramos, Bur, Sci. 12891 Féniav: District of PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE. 19 Bontoc, Bauco, Vanoverbergh 1010. The leaves of the two last are less coriaceous than the type, so that this may not be a valid differentiating character, otherwise, they are as described above. This species has hitherto been identified as D. longifolia (Burm.) Wedd., but on comparison with material of that species from Sikkim, Craib 575, 594, and of D. edulis Wedd. from China, Henry 10536, 12378 A, it seems much more distinct from either than they are from one another, and of the two slightly nearer D. edulis. It differs distinctly from both in the coriaceous narrower leaves, and further from D. longifolia by its smaller glomerules and less-branched inflorescence. The pistillate perianth of Debregeasia is always described as adnate to the ovary: not only in the Philippine species but in the Asiatic it seems to be easily separable, whereas in fruit the achene has hardly increased in size and is very loosely inclosed. The structure of the flowers of the Philippine and Asiatic material is identical. Debregeasia is one of the names taken up by Weddell from Gaudichaud: in the Bot. Voy. Bonite, there is merely a plate, the explanations not appearing till 1866, the genus therefore dating from Weddell’s monograph, 1857. There is an un- doubted older name, Morocarpus * Sieb. & Zucc., 1846: it is not used here, because there is an older Morocarpus.* The latter is regarded as a synonym of the still older Chenopodium Linn., and according to the Vienna Code, should be taken up for the genus. Leucocnide Migq.,* 1851, is generally cited as another synonym, but it is a mixture of two genera, the first two species being Leucosyke: it is here held to be typified by the species now known as Leucosyke capitellata. Local name (Lepanto) : lamag. : 19. ASTROTHALAMUS gen. nov. Flores pistilliferi numerosissimi sessiles in receptaculo "pedunculato varie lobato margine revoluto congesti, perianthio arcte adnato glabro, stigmate capitato: inflorescentiae staminiferae admodum similes sed receptaculo multo minus evoluto, floribus tetrameris, perianthio alte 4- partito, puberulo, acuminato, intus basi breviter lanato, ovario rudimen- tario stipitato, glabro. Genus Sarcochlamydi et Maoutiae affine, hac differt inflorescentiis, illa admodum inflorescentiis et perianthio pistil- lifero arcte adnato, ambabus floribus staminiferis tetrameris, ovario rudi- mentario haud lanato. In insulis Mariannis, Mindanao, et Borneo in- ventum est. Typus: Maoutia reticulata Wedd. Astrothalamus reticulatus comb. nov. Plate III. Maoutia reticulata Wedd. in DC. Prodr. 16* (1869) 235." M. planitora C. B. Rob. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 3 (1908) Bot. 180. | MrnpANAO, District of Zamboanga, Sax River, Williams 2079; San Ramon, Copeland s. n. Borneo, Sarawak, Matang, Hewitt s. n.; Kuching, Moulton s. n. The species was originally collected by Née, both in the Marianne Islands and in Mindanao, and was described by Weddell, with doubt expressed as to its generic position, on account of the absence of pistillate inflorescence. This but not the staminate is present on the more recent Mindanao material, and the remarkable nature of the inflorescence led to its too hasty publication as new, doubt being ® Abh. Akad. Muench. 4* (1846) 218. 8% Adans. Fam. Pl. 2 (1763) 261. * Pl, Jungh. 36. 4 20, ROBINSON. again expressed with regard to the genus. Subsequent comparison of a fragment of the later species with Weddell’s type, by Professor Lecomte of the Muséum @Histoire Naturelle, Paris, left no doubt of their identity. The first collection from Borneo also had pistillate inflorescences, identical with the Philippine, and I am greatly indebted to Mr. J. C. Moulton, of the Sarawak Museum, for a large quantity of material with inflorescences of both kinds. At first sight and even under the lens, no pistillate perianth can be seen: under the compound microscope it appears as a single row of cells, closely adhering to the achene except in some cases at the apex and still less frequently at the base. The inflorescence has already been fully described, it suggests that of Sarcochlamys and the minute flowers have much of the aspect of those of that genus, which is its nearest alliance; however, the perianth differs. The staminate inflorescences show a tendency in the same direction as the pistillate, but do not form a receptacle; the flowers are tetramerous, not a character of either Maoutia or Sarcochlamys, and the rudimentary ovary is not concealed by the woolly indu- mentum of the perianth; these are matters of secondary importance. In these rudimentary ovaries, the gelatinous perianth is quite distinct. One receptacle, otherwise pistillate, has a single lobe staminate. Mariannes, Borneo. 20. MAOUTIA Wedd. : Maoutia setosa Wedd. in Ann. Sci. Nat. Bot. IV 1 (1854) 194. M. platystigma Wedd. lic. : Luzon, District of Bontoc, Vanoverbergh 591: Province of Benguet, Dongon, Bur. Sci. 5840 Ramos; Sablan, Elmer 6203 3 Baguio, For. Bur. 956 Barnes: Province of Pangasinan, Buena Vista, Bur. Sci. 8289 Ramos: Province of Ba- tangas, Cuming 1441 (2 cotypes of M. platystigma Wedd.) : Province of Laguna, Mount Banajao, For. Bur. 7861 Ourran & Merritt. Neecros, Luzuriaga, Bur. Sci. 9929 Robinson. MtnpANao, District of Davao, Sibulan River, Elmer 11777. Dr. F. Gagnepain of the Muséum d’Histoire Naturelle, has kindly compared Bur. Sci. 8289 with the type of M. setosa, Callery 30, also from the mountains of Pangasinan, and finds it a perfect match, and has further indicated the differences between it and the type of M. platystigma, also in their herbarium. Upon careful study of the series of specimens now at hand, there seems no good character left upon which to maintain a separation. If that were done, the Banajao and Batangas collections would be the only ones under M. platystigma, for their leaves are usually widest near the middle, the stipules are less pubescent, and the tomentum of the under surface of the leaves less snowy. Leaf-texture does not assist, for the Banajao leaves are nearly coriaceous, and those of Bur. Sci. 5340 are membranaceous, whereas these collections otherwise exhibit the reverse alliance. But on several collections, leaves are present, some of which are widest near the base, and others about the middle or even above the middle. This is especially true of the two southern collections. The character drawn from the stigma is also unreliable. In one way, the Apo plant is the most distinct of all, having wider stipules. : Local names: labay (Bontoc), dalonog (Benguet), alayan (Apo). Endemic. Maoutia reticulata Wedd., of which M. planitora ©. B. Rob. is a synonym, is here made the type of a new genus. . PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE. 21 21. LEUCOSYKE Zoll. & Mor. KEY TO THE PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF LEUCOSYKE. Stipules large, membranaceous, 7.5 to 10 cm long 1. L. nivea Stipules fairly large, 3 to 4 em long, never softly tomentose on the outer surface. Stipules lanceolate or elliptic-lanceolate; veins connecting midvein with nerves sharply bent 2. L. mindorensis Stipules elliptic; veins connecting midvein with nerves merely arched or nearly straight 3. L. aspera Stipules subchartaceous, 14 to 32 mm long, densely soft-pubescent, the nerves very conspicuous 4. L. hispidissima Stipules not more than 2.5 em long, externally strigose or appressed-strigose. Stipules membranaceous, oblong-lanceolate. Stipules united for at least two-thirds their length. Leaves up to 12 cm long, veins between midvein and nerves more crowded, usually 2 to 3 mm apart, rarely forked. Leaves widest at or above middle................... 5. L. magallanensis Leaves widest below middle 6. L. br Leaves 17 to 22 em long, the veins less crowded, except near the base usually at least 5 mm apart, often forked. 8. L. negrosensis Stipules free for at least three-fourths of their length...... 7. L. ovalifolia Stipules chartaceous, lanceolate. Leaves trinerved 9. L. capitellata Leaves falsely 4-nerved = 10. L. quadrinervia The genus Leucosyke was published in 1845 or 1846. Synonymous with it is Missiessya, a name attached to plate 93 of the Bot. Voy. Bonite, without description. The latter was taken up by Weddell, in 1854, at which time he included Debregeasia in his conception of the genus; in 1869, he accepted Leucosyke. Leucocnide Miq., 1851, is also partly Leucosyke and partly Debregeasia, but the more typical species belong to the former. 1. Leucosyke nivea sp. nov. __L candidissima Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 3 (1908) Bot. 130, non Wedd. in DC. Prodr. 167 (1869) 235.% L. candidissimae affinis, sed differt stipulis multo longioribus et minus pubescentibus, capitulis majoribus, et foliorum basi acutorum venatione. Peduncles mostly paired, 10 to 17 mm long, the fruiting heads 12 to 15 mm in diameter: flowers as in L. candidissima. Trees 4.5 to 7.5 m high, the branchlets terete, longitudinally striate, annulate and conspicuously marked by the scars of fallen leaves, more or less appressed-pubescent or glabrescent, internodes about 1 cm long: petioles 3 to 5 cm long, appressed-pubescent ; lamina broadly elliptic or oblong-elliptic, 21 to 27 cm long, 10 to 13 cm wide, the base acute or subacute, the margins shallowly dentate except in the basal third, the 22 ’ ROBINSON. apex shortly and acutely acuminate; strongly 3-nerved, the nerves con- tinuing about six-sevenths of the length of the lamina, primary veins above the middle of the lamina, about 6 on each side, becoming ap- proximate at the apex, veins between midvein and nerves numerous, about twice as many as the stronger ones between the nerves and the margin, other yenation comparatively inconspicuous; upper surface densely covered with short stiff appressed hairs, the veins of the under surface with similar pubescence, the intervening portions very densely covered with very snowy tomentum; stipules ovate, amplexicaul, 7.5 to 10 em long, bifid at the apex for about 1 cm, acute, appressed-pubes- cent on the outer surface. Minpanao, Lake Lanao, Camp Keithley, Mrs. Clemens s. n. More closely allied to L. candidissima than to any other species, but well distinct in the char- acters noted: its tomentum is much more snowy than in the only specimen of that species in this herbarium. x ' 2. Leucosyke mindorensis sp. nov. Arbuscula, ramulis tomento ferrugineo et pilis albidis brevibus obtectis: foliis subcoriaceis, lanceolato-ovatis vel oblongo-ellipticis, basi acutis vel subrotundatis, margine ima basi excepta dentatis, apice acuminatis vel fere acutis, trinerviis; stipulis lanceolatis, 3 ad 5 em longis: pedunculis — pistilliferis longiusculis, capitulis majusculis, multifloris. Peduncles of pistillate capitula mostly in pairs, when mature 2 to 2.5 cm long, the capitula 12 to 14 mm in diameter: flowers very numerous, subsessile, the perianth forming 5 very short obtuse or acuminate lobes ; ovary flattened, obovoid, about 0.8 mm long; stigma capitate, very shortly penicillate. : A tree 3 m high, its stem 10 em in diameter, the branchlets somewhat longitudinally ribbed, annulate and marked with the scars of fallen leaves, ferruginous-tomentose and with scattered white hairs more con- spicuous toward the apex and upon the petioles and the nerves of the under surface of the leaves, internodes variable in length: petioles 2 to 4 cm long; lamina subcoriaceous, narrowly ovate or oblong-elliptic, 18 to 21 cm long, 7 to 10 em wide, the margins dentate except at the extreme base, the apex acuminate for about one-third the length or less or merely gradually contracted to an acute point, 3-nerved, the nerves extending about two-thirds the length of the lamina, additional primary _ veins 5 or more, veins between the midvein and the nerves numerous, straight or nearly so for three-fifths or two-thirds of their length and then abruptly but obtusely bent downward, usually but not always fork- ing at or near the bend, the yeinlets slender but conspicuous by their light-brown color against the white tomentum of the under surface, from which only the principal veins project; stipules submembranaceous, lan- ceolate, amplexicaul, 3 to 5 cm long, very shortly bifid at the apex, their outer surface pubescent like the stem. : PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE. 23 Mrnporo, Amnay River, at 600 m elevation, For. Bur. 11461 Merritt. Possibly closely allied to L. sumatrana (Bl.) Migq., which has sessile capitula and longer nerves, The next species, which is very similar, can be distinguished by its much less sharply curved or nearly straight veins, both these and the veinlets project- ing above the tomentum, and by the fact that both leaf-surfaces are much more roughly pubescent. 3. Leucosyke aspera sp. nov. Arbuscula (?), foliis longe petiolatis, subcoriaceis, ovalibus, basi acutis, margine ima basi excepta acute serratis, apice abrupte acuminatis, tri- nerviis ; stipulis ellipticis, bifidis, acutis, longiusculis: capitulis brevius- cule pedunculatis, multifloris. Pistillate peduncles solitary or paired, less than 1 em long, the capitula % to 8 mm in diameter ; flowers numerous, subsessile, the 5-lobed perianth 0.4 mm long, and the ovary, 1 mm long, both longer than in the preced- ing species ; stigma short, capitate, very shortly penicillate. Branchlets somewhat angled, the Scars of fallen leaves and of stipules less conspicuous than in the two preceding species, the branchlets, petioles especially near their insertion in the lamina, upper surface of young leaves and the nerves and veins of the under surface at all ages more or less densely covered with rather stiff spreading white hairs 1 to 2 mm long: petioles 32 to 92 mm long, comparatively slender; lamina rigid, subcoriaceous, oval, 18 to 22 cm long, 9 to 13 cm wide, the base acute, the margins with numerous small closely-set acute teeth, these less definite in the basal fourth and wanting at the base, the apex abruptly contracted into a triangular acute acumen about 1 cm long; trinerved, the nerves continuing for about four-fifths of the length of the lamina, additional primary veins 5 or 6, the numerous veins connecting the midvein with the nerves straight or slightly arched, rarely forking, but frequently hay- ing intermediate veins near the nerves arising from the yeinlets which connect these veins with one another; nerves, and veinlets definitely extending beyond the dull-bluish-white tomentum of the under surface and strongly contrasting with it in color, both surfaces when mature scabrous, the upper glabrescent with very numerous cystoliths ; stipules chartaceous, elliptic, 3.5 to 4 cm long, bicostate, many-nerved, bifid at the apex, pilose without on the costas, ciliate, substrigose on the outer surface. Luzon, Province of Albay, Mount Mayon, Bur. Sci. 2915 Mearns (type). SrpuyAN, Magallanes, Elmer 12261. Not to be confused with Missiessya aspera Wedd., which is Leucosyke capitellata var. celtidifolia Wedd., and has never been transferred to Leucosyke: if that form were upheld as a species, the priority of the names would be doubtful, as Gaudichaud’s name is attached to a plate only, _ while M. aspera has the oldest verbal description. The present use of L. aspera will prevent any future difficulty, and it is improbable that M. aspera will ever receive more than varietal rank, although it is usually easily recognizable from L. capitellata. ‘ oN irk ae * 24 ROBINSON. 4, Leucosyke hispidissima Migq. Fl. Ind. Bat. 1° (1859) 265. Missiessya hispidissima Wedd. in Ann. Sci. Nat. Bot. IV 1 (1854) 195. Luzon, Province of Benguet, Baguio, Elmer 5906, 6083, 8972, Williams 1017. This species has been a great stumbling-block for all workers upon Philippine botany, and there is no certainty that its present identification is correct. The type was collected by Callery, “in ins. Manillae montibus Igorrotes.” This is very likely to have been not far from the present Baguio. The two points in the description that are most notable are the length of the petioles, given as 3 to 6 em, and of the stipules 1.5 em. There is but one collection in this herbarium that will nearly agree with this, For. Bur. 4316 Everett, from Negros, and there are many reasons for believing it not to be the true L, hispidissima. There are already three collections of historic interest in connection with the name, the type, Cuming 1672 from Panay, and Vidal 1801 from Mount Mayon, the two last identified by Vidal as L. hispidissima. I have not seen any of these, but suspect the Mayon plant to be the species here called L. aspera, and Cuming 1672 to be L. magallanensis Elmer, a species very similar to the one here identified as L. hispidissima but with different serration. No one of all our species agrees exactly with the description, and the present one especially differs in the length of the petioles, which reach only 13:mm and are usually much shorter, the stipules vary from 14 to 32 mm; the pistillate peduncles are 8 to 20 mm long, and the capitula are 8 to 11 mm in diameter. From an evolutional standpoint, it seems evident that our species, with the exception of L. nivea, have developed from L. capitellata, as shown by the great contrast between the number of collections that must still be referred to that species and the very few whose characters differ sufficiently to cause them to ‘be considered worthy of separate recognition. It seeming evident that the preceding species could most readily be keyed out from the rest by the stipules, a large number of those of all species have been examined, with the result that they have been found to yield very constant characters, the plants thus segregated being of such a nature that their specific distinctness would always have been ‘suspected, though in the absence of any definite character they would more likely have been identified as L. capitellata? Only as between L. brunnescens and H. ovalifolia is the validity of their use doubtful. The stipules are regularly bifid for a rather definite distance from the apex, perhaps they would be better de- seribed as united up to a similar point, and are 2-costate, these costas being produced: in one case, typified by Merrill 481, from Culion, they are parted for about three-fourths of their length or on other stipules of the same plant entirely to the base, being then 1-costate. It is somewhat difficult to group these characters for the purposes of a key. In addition to these costas, there are several additional more slender veins nearly parallel to them: these vary greatly in the ease with which they can be seen, but the differences are probably in all cases merely of degree, and the under- lying basis appears to be the texture of the stipules. This will explain its use in the key, the difficulty in application being that the thicker costa is likely to be taken as an index of the whole. In L. capitellata, for example, the texture _ is thicker than in the present species, although the latter exceeds most of the others, and the veins other than the costas are usually quite inconspicuous. It is to be remembered that this is not an artificial character by which certain col- lections have been separated, but that the differences indicated appear to hold good for plants that would have been suspected of different identity for other reasons. As this character has not hitherto been given much attention, it will not be surprising if some of the species here described as new, should prove iden- PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE. 25 tical with forms hitherto considered varieties of L. capitellata. On the other hand, there are various forms, otherwise differing from typical L. capitellata, but to a less extent, which agree with it in the nature of their stipules; these are here retained in that species, except in the case of L. quadrinervia, where the venation _ is very different. Unfortunately, the stipules are deciduous, but can almost always be found at the apex, being apt to differ in size according to age. 5. Leucosyke magallanensis Elmer Leafl. Philip. Bot. 2 (1910) 677. Frutex, 5 m altus: glomerulis staminiferis centimetralibus, pedunculis 7.5 mm longis, floribus tetrameris: petiolis subcentimetralibus, laminis rigide chartaceis, oblongis vel oblongo-obovatis, 8 ad 11.5 cm longis, 3.5 ad 5 cm latis, basi subacutis ad subrotundatis, margine basi excepta ser- ratis, serraturis brevibus valde incurvo-apiculatis strigosis, apice breviter acuminatis, trinerviis, venis saepissime 5 additis, supra sparsim adpresse strigosis, scabris, subtus in venis strigosis, interstitiis tomentosis ; stipulis oblongo-lanceolatis, submembranaceis, circiter 15 mm longis, apice bifidis, extus strigosis. ; Srpuyan, Patoo River, at 300 m elevation, Hlmer 12282. Most closely allied to the species here called L. hispidissima, but distinguished by its smaller and less-veined stipules, more shortly acuminate leaves, and other characters. 6. Leucosyke brunnescens sp. nov. Glomerulis staminiferis mediocriter pedunculatis, capitulis pistilliferis subsessilibus: foliis in specimine staminifero longiuscule in specimine pistillifero brevius petiolato, laminis rigide chartaceis, basi rotundatis, margine basi excepta dentatis vel crenatis, dentibus acutis vel saepe apiculatis, pagina superiore scabris, subtus in nervis strigosis ; stipulis membranaceis, apice bifidis, oblongo-lanceolatis, 9 ad 15 mm longis. Dioecious: staminate glomerules 6 to 7 mm in diameter, on peduncles 4.5 to 8 mm long, the flowers bracteate, on pedicels attaining 2 mm in length, perianth deeply 5-parted, the segments oblong-lanceolate to ovate, 1.2 to 1.5 mm long, acuminate; filaments 1.6 mm long, anthers 0.6 mm long; rudimentary ovary lanate: pistillate capitula subsessile, about 5 mm in diameter; flowers sessile; perianth about 1 mm in diameter rather obscurely forming 4 or 5 lobes of which one is more distinct than the others; achenes laterally compressed, obliquely ovate, about 1.5 mm long; stigma penicillate-capitate. : Shrubs or small trees, 2 to 3 m high, the branches annulate, densely substrigose toward the apex, becoming glabrate: petioles of the staminate specimen 1.5 to 3 cm long, of the pistillate 6 mm or less, the lamina rigidly chartaceous, inequilateral, ovate or elliptic-ovate, 7 to 10.5 cm long, 3 to 5 cm wide, the base rounded, the margins serrate or almost crenate, the teeth shallow, acute or apiculate, the apex shortly and acutely acuminate, upper surface scabrous, pilose or substrigose, the under pilose on the yellowish veins with gray tomentum in the interstices, trinerved with 3 to 5 additional primary veins, the nerves continuing 26 ROBINSON. three-fourths the length of the lamina or farther on the narrower side; stipules membranaceous, together oblong-lanceolate, free for about 3 mm at the apex, in all 9 to 15 mm long. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, Maunan, Bur. Sci. 7821 Ramos (type, pistillate) : Province of [locos Sur, Sugpan, For. Bur. 14046 Merritt & Darling. This is very close in general appearance and in nearly all of its characters to L. ovalifolia, and can only be told with certainty by means of the stipules, which are connate except at the apex, in contrast to L. ovalifolia where they are separate throughout the greater part of their length, often becoming free, probably through pres- sure from the expanding leaves. Had not the nature of the stipules proven so characteristic in all the other cases, these two species would not have been held distinct. They nearly agree with the description of L. hispidissima, but are very distinct from the species here called by that name. 7. Leucosyke ovalifolia sp. nov. Frutex: pedunculis pistilliferis solitariis vel geminis, breviter pedun- culatis: foliis mediocriter petiolatis, rigide membranaceis, saepissime ovalibus, basi rotundatis vel obtusis, margine basi excepta acute serratis, apice breviter acuminatis, trinerviis; stipulis liberis anguste lineari- | lanceolatis, vel basi solum connatis, membranaceis, usque ad 15 mm longis. Pistillate peduncles solitary or paired, 2 to 4 mm long, the capitula about 5 to 6 mm in diameter; flowers subsessile, the perianth about 1 mm in diameter, oblique, with one rather conspicuous and 2 or 4 other obscure lobes; ovary obliquely ovate, laterally compressed, about 1.4 mm long; stigma penicillate-capitate. : Shrub, about 2.5 m high, the branchlets annulate and scarred, -with deciduous appressed or spreading white substrigose pubescence, internodes usually short: petioles 1.5 to 3 cm long, sparingly strigose, lamina rigidly membranaceous, oval or nearly oval, 6 to 9-cm long, 4 to 6 cm wide, the base rounded or obtuse, the margins except at the base serrate, the teeth acute or apiculate, hair-tipped, the sinuses broadly rounded, the apex shortly acuminate, usually abruptly; trinerved, the nerves continuing for at least three-fourths the length of the lamina, additional primary veins 2 or 3, all venation impressed on the upper surface, projecting from the under, upper surface appressed-strigose and usually somewhat scabrous, veins of under surface strigose, the interstices grayish- or white-tomentose ; stipules membranaceous, free and unicostate, triangular-lanceolate, or united for less than one-fourth of their length and pg acs up to 1.5 cm in length including the long-exserted costas. Luzon, Province of Zambales, Subig, Hallier s. n. Curion, Merrill 481 (type). PaLawaNn, Iwahig, Merrill 706. Very distinct from L. capitellata, especially in the nature of its stipules, but by them alone separable from L. brunnescens, from which it may not prove distinct. PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE. 27 8. Leucosyke negrosensis sp. nov. Capitulis pistilliferis majusculis longiuscule pedunculatis: petiolis mediocribus vel longis, laminis rigide chartaceis, elliptico-oblongis, oval- ibus, vel ovali-ovatis, basi rotundatis vel brevissime acuminatis, margine dentatis vel crenatis, apice acuminatis, trinerviis; stipulis oblongo-lan- ceolatis, membranaceis, 2 ad 2.5 cm longis. Pistillate capitula 8 to 9 mm in diameter on appressed-strigose ped- uncles 1 to 1.7 em long; flowers shortly pedicelled; perianth about 0.8 mm in its longest diameter, nearly oval in outline, hardly lobed, achene obliquely ovate, 1.3 mm long; stigma penicillate-capitate. Shrub or small tree 8 m high, the branches and branchlets appressed- strigose, internodes 2 to 6 cm long; petioles. 1.5 to 5.5 cm long, lamina elliptic-oblong, oval, or oval-ovate, 17 to 22 cm long, 7 to 12 em wide, the base very shortly acuminate or rounded, the margins except at the base serrate or crenate, the teeth shallow but long, acute or apiculate, the apex shortly and acutely acuminate; trinerved with 4 to 6 additional primary veins, the veins between the midvein and the costa more or less sharply bent and often forked, upper surface and veins of the under appressed-strigose, scabrous, interstices of the under gray-tomentose ; stipules membranaceous, oblong-lanceolate, 2 to 2.5 cm long, bifid at the _ apex for one-third of their length, appressed- strigose. Necros, Province of Negros Occidental, Pioc River, in dense forest, Mor, Bur. 4316 Everett; differing from L. capitellata in the stipules, the longer petioles, and the size and outline of the leaves. 9. Leucosyke capitellata Wedd. in DC. Prodr. 16+ (1869) 235.” Urtica capitellata Poir. Suppl. 4 (1816) 227. Leucosyke alba Zoll. & Mor. Syst. Verz. Ind. Arch. (1845) 100. Missiessya fagifolia Gaudich. Bot. Voy. Bonite pl. 93; Wedd. in Ann. Sci. Nat. _ Bot. IV 1 (1854) 195. ; Urtica sp. Blanco Fl, Filip. (1837) 696. Luzon, District of Bontoc, Vanoverbergh 365: Province of Benguet, For. Bur. 941 Barnes: Province of Bataan, Williams 69, 262, Merrill 2543, 2544, Elmer 6665, Whitford 283: Province of Rizal, Loher 4985, Dec. Philip. For. Fl. 88 Ahern’s collector, For. Bur. 1863 Ahern’s collector: Province of Laguna, Elmer s. n., Alberto s. n., For. Bur. 7766 Curran & Merritt, Phil. Pl. 392 Ramos, For. Bur. 11939 Tamesis, Bur. Sci. 10993 Ramos: Province of Tayabas, Whitford 657, Merrill 2032, 2884, Elmer 7849, For. Bur. 6698 Kobbe, Ritchie 32 m: Province of Camarines, Ahern 113, For. Bur. 14259 Aguilar: Province of Albay, Bur. Sci. 6233 Robinson: Province of Sorsogon, For. Bur. 10560 Curran. Po.ttLo, Bur. Sci. 10391 McGregor, Bur. Sci. 6894 Robinson, MAspartr, coll. unknown. LeyTe, Elmer 7326, 7337, For. Bur. 12446 Danao. CrBu, Cuming 1766, For. Bur. 6438 Espinosa. Necros, Whitford 1641, For. Bur. 11241 Everett, For, Bur. 7402 Danao, For. Bur. 15143 Tanosa, Bur, Sei. 9950 Robinson. Minporo, MeGregor 132, Merrill 990, 995, 1180, For. Bur. 3676, 3691, 3725, 6831 Merritt, Whitford 1377. Mrnpanao, District of Zamboanga, Ahern 361, 383, 617, Williams 2109: Lake Lanao, Mrs. Clemens 136‘ District of Davao, Copeland 436, Elmer 10656. 28 ROBINSON. BASILAN, Hallier s. n., For. Bur. 4024 Hutchinson. Bonon, Cuming 1842. Paa- wANn, Bur. Sci. 726 Foxworthy. These collections are by no means uniform, but no definite characters can be found by which to separate them, although several varieties could be distinguished, intergrading with one another. It is noteworthy that the Mindanao collections, as well as a majority of those from the Visayas, and a smaller proportion of those from Luzon and Mindoro, have much shallower serrations than the rest; all necessary intergrades occur. One variety is so different from the rest that the collections under it are cited separately, the leaves are much smaller and more coriaceous, but there are again intermediate forms, and it is not here held to be specifically different. Leucosyke oapiestives var. celtidifolia Wedd. in DC. Prodr. 161 (1869) 235. Missiessya celtidifolia Gaudich. Bot. Voy. Bonite pl. 93; Wedd. in Ann. Sci. Nat. Bot. IV 1 (1854) 195. Missiessya aspera Wedd. in Ann. Sci. Nat. 1. c. Leucosyke celtidifolia Miq. Fl. Ind. Bat. 17 (1859) 266. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, Cuming 1350: Province of Ilocos Norte, For, Bur. 19044 Darling: District of Bontoe, Vanoverbergh 264, Bur. Sci. 5982 Ramos, For. Bur. 10987 Ourran, For. Bur. 16525 Curran & Merritt: Province of Benguet, Williams 1018: Province of Nueva Vizcaya, For. Bur. 14857 Darling: Province of Pangasinan, Merrill s. n.: Province of Pampanga, Loher 4988, For. Bur. 19422 Curran: Province of Bataan, Whitford 1149, Elmer 6976. This is a more northern variety; where its range ae that of the species, the elevation is greater. Local names: alalasi, ararasi, arasi’ (Bontoc) ; anagasi (Cebu, Zamboanga) ; anugas (Sorsogon) ; banato (Tayabas) ; bajebaje (Negros) ; bunkilan (Basilan) ; daluncadios (Negros); gasigasi (Zamboanga); hanlagasi, hilagasa, hilagasi, lagasi (Mindoro); jinlagasi, Uagasi (Negros); jinagasi (Camarines); leasin, layasin (Tayabas); ysis maya (Rizal). Java to the Moluccas and Formosa. 10. Leucosyke quadrinervia sp. nov. Frutex vel arbuscula, ramulis plus minusve flexuosis: foliis mediocriter petiolatis, basi valde inaequilateralibus, marginibus crenatis, apice acum- inatis, spurie quadrinerviis; stipulis chartaceis, lanceolatis, admodum parvis. Dioecious: staminate glomerules on peduncles 1 cm long or less, com- paratively few-flowered, 5 mm in diameter; flowers shortly pedicelled, perianth 1.5 to 2 mm long, 4-parted, the segments lanceolate, acuminate, strigose on the outer surface near the apex; filaments 1.5 to 2 mm long; rudiment of ovary lanate: pistillate peduncles 3 to 6 mm long, the capitula 6 to 7 mm in diameter ; flowers shortly pedicelled, perianth-lobes very short, triangular; ovary oblique, 1.4 mm long, pubescent at the apex; stigma short, capitate. Shrubs or small trees, attaining 7 m in height, the branches and branchlets sometimes strikingly zigzag-flexuose, striate, annulate, scarred, often glaucous; petioles 4 to 10 mm long, the rigid lamina strongly inequilateral, especially at the base, elliptic to ovate, 4.5 to 11.5 cm long, | 2 to 5.5 em wide, or still longer on young shoots, the base usually very PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE. 29 shortly acuminate, the margins entire near the base and on the narrower side sometimes for nearly half its length, elsewhere shallowly dentate or crenate, the apex shortly and acutely acuminate, falsely 4-nerved, the basal outer vein from the nerve of the wider side arising almost or quite at the insertion of the petiole and equally prominent with the nerves throughout its length; nerves not spreading widely from the midvein, that of the narrower side continuing about six-sevenths the length of the lamina, of the wider side two-thirds or more, additional primary veins 2 or 3, veins connecting the midvein and nerves numerous, arched or nearly straight, the reticulations conspicuous; the scabrous upper surface glabrous except on the veins, the veins and nerves of the under - surface shortly appressed-pubescent, the interstices gray-tomentose ; stip- ules chartaceous, lanceolate, bifid at the apex, about 1 cm long, with very short and dense white appressed pubescence. Baranes Istanps, Sabtan Island, Bur. Sci. 3752 Fénix (type): Batan Island, For. Bur, 15276 Agudo, Bur. Sci. 3653 Fénia, BaBuyaNES ISLANDS, Camiguin Island, Bur. Sci. 4184 Féniv. The Forestry Bureau collection, received after this description had been written, is probably from a young shoot, having larger and thinner leaves, five in number, of which four show the characteristic venation, the fifth is definitely trinerved. This is one of a series obtained through the energy of Mr. H. M. Curran, to illustrate the economic plants of this most northern group of the Philippines, and contains the note that it is used as food for goats. : _ Local names: bujuan (Sabtan) ; ouhuan epee probably mere variants in spelling of the same sound. ADDENDA. In the brief time that has elapsed between the correction of the proofs of the two parts of this paper, two important series of collections have been made, throwing additional light on several species. In addition, duplicates of Loher’s Philippine collections have been received from Kew, © and a valuable set from British India, both containing suggestive material of this family. Moreover, J. J. Smith’s recent paper on the woody Urticaceae of Java has arrived, and his lucid descriptions have made it possible to compare many of our species with much greater certainty. However, I have found no reason to doubt the accuracy of the segregations made herein, except in the case of Debregeasia angustifolia, Even there, the Indian and Chinese collections, already referred to, and Gaudichaud’s and Wight’s plates, leave no other course open than that which has been - taken. I have not followed Mr. Smith in replacing the name Boehmeria platyphylla Don by a new combination based upon Urtica caudata Burm.., because Boehmeria caudata Sw. is to me a sufficient obstacle to such a course. If Weddell’s idea of the limits of the species and his synonymy % Koord. & Val. Bijdr. Boomsort. Jav. 12 (1910) 672-753. 30 - ROBINSON. were to be accepted entire, the oldest valid name seems to be B. japonica (Linn. f.) Mig. But all recent authors segregate some one or more of his varieties as species, with little agreement. Mr. Smith, for ex- ample, considers B. platyphylla var. clidemioides Wedd, with the syno-- nyms cited, as two species, one in a very different alliance, yet CG E. Wright °° adheres to Weddell’s treatment. In addition to the following, several collections of less interest have been obtained. LAPORTEA Gaudich. Laportea. rigidifolia C. B. Rob. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 5 (1911) Bot. 483. Luzon, ‘Province of Benguet, Sablan, Bur. Sci. 12748 Féniv. The leaf-apex, which on previous collections was only uninjured on a single leaf and that a small one, is here well preserved and is rather characteristic. The petiole is over 11 em long, the lamina about 57 cm long, and the apex is gradually contracted to a somewhat faleate acute point, the acumen, if there can be said to be one, being about 16 cm long. The plant is noted as very poisonous. Local names: lupa a nalabaga (Il.); addalateng (Ig.). PILEA Lindl. ‘ Pilea calcicola C. B. Rob, 1. ¢. 493. Luzon, Province of Rizal, Montalban, Loher 6902, topotype and very peak LECANTHUS Wedd. Lecanthus wightii Wedd. in Ann. Sci. Nat. Bot. IV 1 (1854) 187. The full-sized leaves of Smith & Cave 2797, Sikkim, so named, have at least one hundred times the area of the largest on Doctor Copeland’s collection from Mount Apo. Those of our other specimens are intermediate in size, but all much smaller than the mature ones of the Indian collection. ELATOSTEMATOIDES ©. B. Rob. Elatostematoides manillense (Wedd.) C. B. Rob. 1. ¢. 501. Luzon, Province of Rizal, Angilog, Loher 6915: Province of Laguna, Calauan, Bur. Sci, 12367 McGregor. Neither is typical, the former being coarse and pubes- cent, the latter unusually delicate. ELATOSTEMA Forst. Elatostema sikkimense C. B. Clarke in Journ, Linn. Soc. Bot. 15 (1876) 124. From Smith & Cave 858, Sikkim, it would seem that to the characters separat- ing this species from EF. luzonense, may be added the stoutness of the spurs of the staminate bracts, this making them more conspicuous than those of the Philippine species, although in the latter they are well developed. Elatostema simulans C. B. Rob. I. ¢. 519. Luzon, Province of Benguet, Sablan, Bur. Sci. 12754 Fénix: Province of La- guna, Calauan, Bur. Sci. 12357 McGregor. It is to be noted that the collections identified with the type of this species have pistillate receptacles only. o * Journ. Linn, Soe, Bot. 26 (1899) 487. PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE. 31 Elatostema obovatum Wedd. in Ann. Sci. Nat. Bot. IV 1 (1854) 190. Luzon, Province of Laguna, Calauan, Bur. Sci. 12370 McGregor. This collec- tion is an excellent match for Cuming 628, from the same locality. Staminate receptacles are still wanting, but there is little doubt that it has been placed in the correct alliance, as shown by its similarity to H. delicatulum Wedd., also represented by Bur. Sci. 12361 McGregor, Calauan, and to B. glaucescens Wedd., also represented by Bur. Sci. 12334 McG@regor, Calauan. Elatostema viridescens Elmer Leafl. Philip. Bot. 1 (1908) 285. Luzon, Province of Benguet, Baguio, Bur. Sci. 12752 Féniw. The specimens are sterile, and have smaller leaves and shorter stipules than the more southern collections, but are otherwise very similar. Elatostema hookerianum Wedd. in Arch. Mus. Paris 9 (1857) 309. R. E. Cooper 692, Sikkim, suggests an alliance for LH. apoense Elmer, but at least the young staminate bracts are more corniculate, the plants glabrous, and the leaves smaller and of somewhat different outline and texture than in the Apo plants. Elatostema obtusiusculum C. B. Rob. 1. ¢. 537. Luzon, Province of Benguet, Sablan, Bur. Sei. 12755 Fénie. As critical col- lections as could be desired to test the validity of two of the species proposed as new have been obtained, and the one just cited has distinctly smaller leaves than the type with a corresponding decrease in the number of marginal teeth, bringing it close in both these respects to EH. brongniartianum Wedd. This makes the characters stated in my key insufficient for certain determination, but still suggestive; those in the text, drawn from venation and pubescence, seem quite reliable. Elatostema pidabeiim C. B. Rob. 1. ¢. 535. Luzon, Province of Benguet, Baguio, Bur. Sci. 12757 Féniz. Again, the leaves are smaller than in the type, and the smaller ones can hardly be called distinctly acuminate. With these qualifications, the species still seems distinct and to be separable as previously noted. Elatostema variegatum ‘C. B. Rob. 1. ¢. 538. Luzon, Province of Benguet, asus re! Bur. Sci, 12756 Féniz. Elatostema sp. Luzon, Province of cael Sablan, Bur. Sci, 12753 Féniv. This differs from any Philippine or other species with which I am acquainted, but is left un- described, as no staminate receptacles are present, and the alliance, although aupoe! with BE. longipedunculatum Elmer, is not obvious. ; PROCRIS Commers. ’ Procris lagunensis ©. B. Rob. 1. c. 506. PHILIPPINES, without further locality, Loher 6945. The leaves are somewhat narrower than the type, and render the we of the species increasingly doubtful. ILLUSTRATIONS. Pxate I. Hlatostema variable C. B. Rob. (Photograph by Eustaquio Cortes.) II. Blatostema sessile Forst. Original collection, preserved in the British Museum of Natural History, London. Reduced nearly one-half. (Photograph by Perey Highley.) III. Astrothalamus reticulatus (Wedd.) C. B. Rob, (Photograph by Eusta- quio Cortes.) 1000043 33 ROBINSON : PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE. ] [PHIL. JOURN. SCI., Vou. VI, No. 1. ‘ AY ya a . & - ( ; a PF a ‘e Piare |. ELATOSTEMA VARIABLE C. B. Ros. ROBINSON : PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE. ] [PHIL. JouRN. ScI., VoL. VI, No. 1. Piate Il. ELATOSTEMA SESSILE Forst. ROBINSON : PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE. | [PHIL. JouRN. ScI., VoL. VI, No. 1. e Piste Il. ASTROTHALAMUS RETICULATUS (Wepp.) C. B. Ros. THE PHILIPPINE JoURNAL oF Scrence, C. Borany. Vol. VI, No. 1, March, 1911. NOTES ON PHILIPPINE ORCHIDS WITH DESCRIPTIONS OF NEW SPECIES, III. By Oakes Ames. (From the Ames Botanical Laboratory, North Easton, Mass., U. 8. A.) i The orchid flora of the Philippines, although rich and varied, is not dis- tinctive. If we except the sections of one or two genera which appear to have their center of distribution in these Islands, it is very similar in type to that of adjacent regions. According to our present information nearly one-fourth of the recognized orchid genera of the world are known to inhabit the Philippines,’ but with surprisingly few exceptions they are poorly represented in the number of species assigned to them. It is safe to say that our acquaintance with Philippine orchids is extremely limited and that further explorations are sure to add substantially to our. lists of recorded species; for rarely a collection comes to hand from the Bureau of Science which does not contain either novelties, or species heretofore unknown to be natives of the Islands. Furthermore, these collections fall far short of being exhaustive in their nature. Frequently they represent only the plants that were in flower at the time the col- lectors were in the field. Then again, the Islands have not been botanized with equal thoroughness; Luzon, for example, being much better known than any of the others. ‘ ; In my previously published lists of Philippine orchids about seventy genera and three hundred and forty-seven species have been recorded. Including the species described in “Orchidaceae” by Mr. R. A. Rolfe, and the Erias published in this Journal by Dr. R. G. Leavitt, about one hundred and sixty-five novelties have been recognized among recent collections. In addition to these there is a mass of material in the her- barium of the Bureau of Science which still remains for critical study and final identification. I have prepared for this paper a list of the genera which have been ascribed to the Philippines, together with the number of species which have been referred to them. I have omitted genera and species which in my estimation are doubtful or which have been attributed to the * According to Pfitzer’s enumeration in “Die natiirlichen Pflanzenfamilien,” : 35 Bee AMES. Philippines on unreliable information or by disputable authority. Per- haps my enumeration is ultraconservative, but I have endeavored to make it accurate, exercising rather severe censorship where adequate proof regarding a reference was not to be obtained. In 1884, R. A. Rolfe* published a paper on the flora of the Philippine Islands and its probable derivation, in which he recorded for the Or- chidaceae sixty-seven genera and four hundred and sixty species. When it is borne in mind that my list includes ten additional genera and more than one hundred species which were described after Mr. Rolfe’s paper appeared, the discrepancy between his estimate and mine may be ac- counted for on the assumption that a more rigid exclusion was made on my part of data furnished by questionable authority. It is also possible that Mr. Rolfe possessed information which I have failed to secure. In any event it inust be conceded that estimates based on printed records are never conclusive and that one author may accept what another will reject. One source of error and uncertainty which it is extremely difficult to avoid in making provisional lists is the tendency of horticultural houses to conceal, for business reasons, the native country from which desirable orchids have been introduced. In this case species are sometimes referred to a region far distant from the real one, or are distributed among horti- culturists as natives of a country from which they may not have come. Although many collectors have been in the field for the Bureau of Science during the past five years, several horticultural orchids sup- posedly of Philippine origin, which would have attracted attention by their size and beauty, have failed to appear in the rich collections which have been forwarded to me for identification. The explanation of this may be the one offered above. If so it indicates that horticultural records regarding distribution should be cautiously used. Of the large Philippine genera which have been exhaustively studied, Eria and Dendrochilum occupy the foremost position. If we exclude Dendrobium with its fifty or more species, these two genera are the largest. Dendrochilum is the most interesting from a botanical view- point as it is the only large group which is characteristically Philippine. The section Acoridium, which for many years was known only through Dendrochilum tenellum, has grown rapidly since the botanical explora- tions were instituted which followed the American occupation of the Islands, until it now numbers over thirty species. Of these not one is known to be a native of any other part of the eastern Tropics and none so far as I have been able to ascertain has any near allies outside of the Philippines. When J. J. Smith monographed Dendrochilum in 1904 only forty-three species had been described. At present-more than fifty * Journ, Linn, Soc. Bot, 21: 283. 4 NOTES ON PHILIPPINE ORCHIDS, III. sae have been identified as natives of the Philippines and of these over forty have been described since 1905. In other words the genus has, computed on the basis of Smith’s monograph, been doubled since botanical explora- tions were begun by the Bureau of Science, and of the species discovered - more than half belong to the section Acortdiwm. Furthermore, of the new species of orchids published in my contributions to our knowledge of the Philippine flora about one-third have been members of Den- drochilum. No similar result has been obtained in any other orchid group, the only approach to it being that experienced in the study of the section Distichae of the genus Cestichis; more species of this section being found in the Philippines than in all other regions combined. One point worthy of remark concerning Philippine genera of Or- chidaceae is that according to our present knowledge none are endemic. Attention was directed to this fact by Mr. Rolfe in his paper to which reference has already been made, and no exception to it has yet been noted. In connection with Mr. Rolfe’s suggestions as to the probable derivation of the Philippine flora it is interestitig to consider not only genera but subgenera or sections, and especially the species of Dendro- — chilum which belong to Acoridium and Pseudacoridium. If the Phil- ippine flora is to be regarded as of comparatively recent formation by the introduction of species from neighboring territory, it is intensely in- teresting to study such subgenera or sections as Acoridium in Dendro- chilum and Distichae in Cestichis, and to contemplate the cause of the remarkable development they seem to have experienced. Unfortunately, the orchid flora of the neighboring islands, if we except Java, has not been sufficiently investigated to warrant any definitive conclusions, but what is known makes possible a fascinating comparative study which indicates that in certain Philippine orchid genera there has been un- usual development, or a minimum of extinction after introduction from regions less favorable to the species introduced. When the flora of ad- jacent islands is more thoroughly studied as we may find other centers: of distribution for Acoridium and an extension of range for species now - believed to be endemic. But on the basis of existing records this group is localized in the Philippines with only a few representatives in other parts of the Malayan Archipelago. From a horticultural or economic viewpoint the orchid flora of the Philippines is of little importance. With the exception of a few species of Aerides, Dendrobium, Eria, Paphiopedilum, Phalaenopsis and Vanda there are none which may be assigned to the first rank of horticultural acquisitions. If we distribute the Philippine genera among the five tribes admitted by Bentham in the “Genera Plantarum,” which for conciseness and ease of comprehension are very useful and much less confusing than Pfitzer’s ¥ 38 AMES. cumbersome system in Engler and Prantl’s “Die natiirlichen Pflan- zenfamilien,” we have the following result: 1. Cypripedieae, 3 genera 10 species. 4. Epidendreae, 21 genera 301 species. 2. Ophrydeae, 2 genera 20 species. 5. Vandeae, 27 genera 122 species. 3. Neottieae, 24 genera 42 species. THE GENERA OF PHILIPPINE ORCHIDACEAE * WITH THE NUMBER OF SPECIES ASSIGNED TO THEM, ALPHABETICALLY ARRANGED IN FIVE TRIBES ACCORDING TO BENTHAM AND HOOKER’S “GENERA PLANTARUM.” ; EPIDENDREAE. y VANDEAE—Continued. 230. Acanthophippium 1 233. Geodorum 1 176. Agrostophyllum 3 297. Grammatophyllum 2 3 227. Bletia?=Hulophia? * 51 | 376. Luisia 2 1 286. Bulbophyllum 16 14 | 380. Phalaenopsis 4 10 219. Calanthe 9 4 | 226. Plocoglottis 3 178. Ceratostylis 7 2| 172. Podochilus 19 161. Cestichis (Liparis) 16 1| 169. Polystachya 1\ 147. Chrysoglossum 1 373. Renanthera 1 1 150. Coelogyne rf 4| 408. Rhynchostylis 2 276. Dendrobium 26 25 | 387. Saccolabium 3 3 155. Dendrochilum 56 2 | 382. Sarcanthus 2 2 278. Bria 44 3 | 406. Sarcochilus 5 157. Malawvis (Microstylis) 23 378. Stauropsis 1 1 145. Nephelaphyllum 1 402. Taeniophyllum 3 162. Oberonia 7 —-1| 295. Thelasis 5 232. Pachystoma 1 406. Thrivspermum 2 218. Phaius 4 1 | 410. Trichoglottis 4 3 154. Pholidota b 1 | 391. Vanda 4 280. Phreatia 1l 375. Vandopsis 1 276. Sarcopodium (Den- EEN eer a drobium) — 2 1 80 2 228, Spathoglottis . os coke OPHRYDEAE. i ee 241 60 | 32. Habenaria 15 4 == ==} 14. Herminium 1 VANDEAE. 16 eae 296. Acriopsis 1 1 See 404. Aerides 4 3 NEOTTIEAE. : 392. Angraecum 1 111. Adenostylis (Zeuwine) 3 1 383. Cleisostoma 4 7| 94. Aphyllorchis 2 302. Cymbidium 2 1} 112. Cheirostylis 2 299. Dipodium j Be) 140. Chloidia (Corymbis) 1 381. Doritis. 1 73. Corybas (Corysanthes ) I 235. Eulophia 6 1] 80. Oryptostylis 1 . The numbers before the generic names indicate the position or the approximate position of each genus in Pfitzer’s treatment of the Orchidaceae in Engler & Prantl’s “Die natiirlichen Pflanzenfamilien.” 4 * . 5 ‘ rediag stricta i a Placed by Lindley in “The Genera and Species of ™ 0 Sette Plants” among Species valde dubiae, under Eulophia. e figures in the second column indicate speci f ich Pisani ance pecies of which I have seen no NOTES ON PHILIPPINE ORCHIDS, III. 39 NEOTTIEAE—Continued. NEOTTIEAE—Continued. | | 106. Cystorchis 2 | 51. Thelymitra 1 95. Didymoplewis 1 | 139. Tropidia 2 3 113. Hpipactis (Goodyera) 4 89. Vanilla 1 2 107. Brythrodes 1 105. Vrydagzeynea 1 93. Bpipogum 1 36 oe 86. Galeola 1 =—_ == 121. Haemaria 1 CYPRIPEDIEAE. 116. Hetaeria 1 2. Apostasia 1 122. Hylophila 1 1. Newviedia 1 1 55. Microtis 1 5. Paphiopedilum 4 3 118. Myrmechis 2 Ry cae 74. Pogonia 3 tie site 99. Spiranthes 1 Total number of genera 77 81. Stereosandra 1 Total number of species °495 LIST OF SPECIES, The following list of species includes descriptions of novelties, addi- tions to my previous records, and notes on species which supplement previously published data. The genera are arranged in accordance with the sequence adopted by Pfitzer in Engler and Prantl’s “Die natiirlichen Pflanzenfamilien.” Two genera are added to the number already known to be indigenous, namely Pachystoma and Dipodium, twenty-two new species are described, and fifteen additions made to the number of ‘Species in my lists of Philippine orchids. 5. PAPHIOPEDILUM Pfitzer. Paphiopedilum Haynaldianum (Reichb. f.) Stein Orchideenb. 470. Specimens of this well-known horticultural orchid have been received from Mr. W. 8. Lyon. It was originally collected by Wallis near Manila in 1874. Luzon, Tarlac Province, Lyon 49, not much above sea level. Paphiopedilum ciliolare (Reichb. f.) Stein Orchideenb. 462, f. 145. This species which has been reported from Mindanao was collected by Mr. W. S. Lyon on Dinagat Island in February, 1909 (No. 142). I have as yet found no specimens among the collections of the Bureau of Science of P. philippinensis, P. Lowii, and P. Rothschildianum, all of which have been ascribed to the Philippine Islands. 106. CYSTORCHIS Bl. Cystorchis javanica Blume Fl. Jav. Orch. (1858) 87. Cystorchis variegata var. purpurea Ridl. in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. 32: 399. What I take to be a representative of (. javanica proper comes from the: Island of Polillo. According to notes made by the collector the leaves are purplish, a characteristic of the species. ©. variegata, which is a variety of OC. javanica, has green leaves. Only a single specimen was found. Plant 1.5 dm tall from a creeping rhizome, leafy. Leaves petiolate, the lamina ovate-lanceolate about 3 em long. Peduncle puberulous, °The species to which reference is made in this paper are included in this enumeration. 40 AMES, slender, bracteate. Flowers 5 to 6 ‘mm long. Lateral sepals oblong, obtuse, 1-nerved, with the upper sepal forming a hood over the gynaecium. Labellum saceate at the base, with two globose appendages, one on each side, base of the sac acute, protruding between the lateral sepals; lamina elongated, entire, obtuse. PoLiLLo, Bur. Sci. 9282 O. B. Robinson, August 19, 1909, terrestrial, 100 m above the sea, 150. COELOGYNE Lindl. Coelogyne integerrima Ames in Philip. Journ. Sci. 4 (1909) Bot. 665. Another collection of this species has come to hand from Pauai where it was found at an altitude of 2,100 m. The flowers are described by the collector as pale-green. In dried specimens the labellum appears to have been brownish at the base and near the middle. The, graceful racemes are nearly erect or droop- ing, with about eight large flowers. From its appearance when dried this species ought to be worthy of cultivation for horticultural purposes. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Pauai, Bur. Sci. 8454, 8519 R. C. McGregor, May, 1909, at an altitude of about 2,100 m. Coelogyne Merrillii sp. nov. Pseudobulbi fasciculati, pyriformes vel ovoideo-oblongi, rugosi, di- phyll, circiter 4 cm longi, plus minus 2.4 em in diametro. Folia oblongi- lanceolata, acuminata, acuta, nervosa, breviter petiolata, 9.5-15 cm longa, 1.6-3.6 cm lata, prominente 3-5-nervia, subcoriacea. Pedunculi term- inales, a pseudobulbo immaturo producti, erecti, 8.5-15 cm longi, an- cipites, bialati. Racemus flexuosus, circa 2—-4-florus. Bracteae deciduae ? circa 3 cm longae, lanceolatae, acutae. Sepala lateralia oblonga, acuta, 3.4 cm longa, 1 cm lata. Sepalum dorsale lanceolatum, 3.7 cm longum, 11 mm latum. Petala linearia, 3.5 en longa, 2 mm lata, acuta, pro- minente 1-nervia. Labellum ovatum,|3-lobatum, 3.7 cm longum, 2 cm latum; /obus medius lateralibus major, oblongus cum apiculo, 1.5 cm longus, 1 cm latus ; lobi Jaterales obtusi, 3 mm longi, carinae 5, flexuosae, margine lacerae, usque ad basim lobi medii extensae. Columna clavata, 3 cm longa. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Pauai, Merrill 6620, May, 1909, on boulders in upper pine region, about 1,800 m altitude, flowers somewhat straw-colored, very fragrant, odor of Nymphaea. This species belongs in Pfitzer’s ninth section, Cristate, and appears to be distinct from all known species of the genus. The carinae of the lip, five in number, are various in length, the middle one hardly extends to the base of the middle lobe while the outer ones are abbreviated, about 4 mm long, and situated near the lateral lobes. : Coelogyne marmorata Reichb. ¢. is, from the description, a closely allied spe- cies. I have seen no material. ©. Loheri Rolfe is another near ally, but belongs to quite another section of the genus. My conception of (. Loheri is based on a specimen in the U. S. National Herbarium which is a duplicate of the type number (Loher 549). . NOTES ON PHILIPPINE ORCHIDS, III. 41 155. DENDROCHILUM BI. Dendrochilum (§ Platyclinis) cagayanense sp. nov. Aff. D. Cobbiano. Pseudobulbi 8 cm longi, 1.5 cm in crassitudine, cylindracei, vaginis tubularibus, arcte appressis, acutis vestiti. Folia magna, petiolata, 3 dm longa, 6 cm lata, coriacea, elliptico-lanceolata, subacuta; petiolus 1.5 dm longus. Pedunculus multo folium excedens, 4.5 dm longus. Racemus circiter 2.5 dm longus. Bracteae inflores- centiae glumaceae, acutae, pedicellum cum ovario excedentes ad basim flores amplectentes, 1 cm longae, 7 mm latae. Sepala lateralia lineari- lanceolata, acuta, 11 mm longa. Sepalum dorsale simile. Petala \ineari- lanceolata, 3-nervia, 9 mm longa, 2 mm lata. Labellum 3-lobatum ; lobi laterales minuti, triangulares, 0.75 mm longi; lobus medius oblongus, ad apicem rotundatus, 3.5 mm longus, 2 mm latus. Colwmna apice cre- nulato; alae laterales a basi ortae. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur. 16772 H. M. Curran, March 4 1909. Dendrochilum cagayanense is a near ally of D. Cobbianum. It is a more robust species with narrow sepals and petals and a very different labellum. As in D. Cobbianum the lateral lobes of the labellum are inconspicuous and much reduced, but are somewhat setaceous. The stelidia of the column are linear- triangular and basal. Their tips reach to the base of the obscurely crenulate or denticulate terminal wing. . Dendrochilum (§ Acoridium) confusum sp. nov. Sepala lateralia 3-nervia, 3 mm longa, 1.75 mm lata. Sepalum in- termedium lateralibus simile. Petala oblanceolata, obtusa, 3-nervia, 3 mm longa, 1.75 mm lata. Labellum spathulatum vel cuneato-obovatum, 2.75 mm longum, 2 mm latum prope apicem. This is the small flowered plant which I described in “Orchidaceae” II as D. bicallosum var. minor, More material has come to hand which necessitates a revision of my former views. Aside from the constant. difference in the form of the labellum and the size of the flowers there are other points of dissimilarity which I think can not be passed over as merely varietal. These, however, are difficult to describe although apparent when flowers of the two species are com- pared side by side. The flowers of D. bicallosum are more stellate in aspect, when flattened out, than those of D. corfusum, and their general shape gives the impression that the sepals, petals and labellum are longer in proportion to the width than the corresponding parts of D: confusum. The racemes of D. con- fuswm are much more densely flowered and shorter than those of D. bicalloswm. Luzon, Province of Laguna, Mount Maquiling, Bur. Sci. 5640 H. M. Curran, flowers somewhat salmon-colored, odorless. Dendrochilum bdicallosum has also been found on Mount Maquiling, where it was collected in 1907 by H. M. Curran & M. L, Merritt, For. Bur, 7797. Dendrochilum (§ Platyclinis) cymbiforme sp. nov. Pseudobulbi pyriformes, in sicco rugosi, 2 cm longi, 6 cm in crassitudine prope basim, vaginis tubularibus, arcte appressis, acutis, vestiti. Folia 42 AMES. lineari-lanceolata, acuta, coriacea, nitida, 1.5-1.6 dm longa, 1.5 cm lata, petiolata; petioli 4 cm longi. Bracteae inflorescentiae 4 mm longae, cymbiformes. Pedunculus multo folium, excedens, gracilis, flexuosus, 3 dm longus. Recemus 1.5 dm longus. Sepala lateralia oblonga, acuta, sub- falcata, 4 mm longa, 1.5 mm lata. Sepalum dorsale oblongum, acutum, -3 mm longum. Petala-oblonga, acuta, uninervia, ad basim angustata, 3 mm longa, 1 mm lata. Labellwm cymbiforme, 4 mm longum, rotun- datum vel ellipticum, apiculatum, integerrimum. Colwmna rigida, 3 mm longa; alae laterales in dentes perbreves triangulares reductae, quorum unus utroque ad basim columnae stat. Luzon, Abra Subprovince, Mount Bawagan, Bur. Sci. 7183, 7135 Maaximo Ramos, Febyuary 9, 1909, flowers yellow, altitude about 550 m. From all other Philippine species Dendrochilum cymbiforme is clearly separ- able by means of its cymbiform, entire labellum and triangular, reduced, basally situated stelidia. In dried specimens the leaves are glossy above and leathery in texture. ©. cymbiforme appears to be very distinct from all known species of the genus. Dendrochilum (§ Acoridium) Macgregorii Sp. nov. Pseudobulbi pyriformes, in sicco rugosi, 8-15 mm longi, vaginis tubu- laribus, arcte appressis, acutis, vestiti. Folia linearia, rigida, acuta, submembranacea, 6.5-10.4 cm longa, 2 mm lata, petiolata. Bracteae inflorescentiae 2 mm longae, 2 mm latae, cymbiformes. Peduncylus filiformis, folio longitudine fere aequalis, vel brevior. Racemus 4.5 cm longus, distichus. Sepala lateralia ovato-lanceolata, acuta, 2-2.5 mm longa, 1.25 mm lata. Sepalum dorsale oblongum, obtusum, 2 mm longum. Petala obovata, 3-nervia, 2 mm longa, obtusa vel subacuta. Labellum cuneato-ovatum, apiculatum, integerrimum, ad basim subcordatum, 1 mm longum, ad basim labelli prope columnam callus incrassatus. Columna ut in D. pumilo. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Mount Pulog, Bur. Sci. 8849 R. CO. McGregor, July 4, 1909. Dendrochilum Macgregorii is a slender species which resembles D. ewile in habit, although it is more closely related to D. Whitfordii than to any other known species of the genus. The labellum resembles that of D. Whitfordii very closely. The narrow grass-like leayes which usually exceed the inflorescence, the shorter, denser racemes and the smaller flowers are characters which clearly distinguish D. Whitfordii, The flowers in dried specimens are deep-madder. 157. MALAXIS Soland. ex Sw. Malaxis balabacensis sp. nov. \ Planta 1-4 dm alta, foliosa, floribus flavis in racemo gracili, spicato, +1.5 dm longo. Folia 6, ovato-lanceolata, acuminata, acuta, nervosa, 5-12 cm longa, usque ad 5 cm lata, in sicco chartacea glabra. Pedwn- eulus angulatus, 1-2.5 dm longus, foliis longior. Bracteae lineari- lanceolatae, acuminatae, acutae, 4-7 mm longae, scariosae, dependentes. } : - NOTES ON PHILIPPINE ORCHIDS, III. 43 Racemus sublaxiflorus, usque ad 13 cm longus. Sepala lateralia ovata, 3-3.5 mm longa, prope basim 3 mm lata, 3-nervia. Sepalum dorsale ovatum, acutum, 3-4 mm longum, 3-nervium. Petala rhombico-lanceo- lata, 4 mm longa, 2 mm lata, 1-nervia. JLabellum integerrimum, subro- tundatum, a basi labelli ad apicem 2 mm longum, prope apicem callus incrassatus ; auriculae oblongae, obtusae, 1 mm longae. Colwmna brevis, stelidiis obtusis truncatis ; ad basim columnae a tergo dens, vel papilla. Baxapac, Merrill 5374, October 16, 1906 (type), in forests, terrestrial, alti- tude about 20 m. Srsuru (Sulu Archipelago), Merrill 5296, October 13, 1906, in dry thickets near the seashore. This species is clearly distinguished from all others from the Philippines, except M. Ramosii, of which I have any knowledge, through its rhombic-lanceolate petals. At the base of the column on its outer surface there is a conspicuous decurved tooth or papilla. The labellum is rotundate, deeply cordate-cleft at the base, and near the tip bears a curious callus which in dried specimens is blackish and which at its posterior end terminates in a minute fovea. Malaxis bataanensis sp. nov. Caulis brevis, circiter 3 cm longus. Folia 2 (vel 3 ?), chartacea, lanceo- lata superne, inferne late ovata, acuminata, acuta, 6—7 cm longa, 1.5-3.5 em lata, in petiolum latum vaginantem transiens. Pedwnculus elongatus, inferne nudus, bialatus, gracilis, 2-2.8 dm longus, 1-1.5 mm in crassi- tudine. Racemus spiciformis, valde elongatus, usque ad 2 dm longus. Flores multi, color luteus, qualis est mali aurantii. Bracteae inflores- centiae valde dependentes, triangulares, acutae, setaceae, +4 mm longae. Pedicelli cum ovario 4. mm longi. Sepala lateralia orbicularia, 3-nervia, 2.5 mm longa, 2 mm lata. Sepalum posticum lateralibus majus, ellip- ticum, subacutum, 3.75 mm longum, 2 mm latum. Petala lanceolata, 1-nervia, subacuta, basi attenuata, 3 mm longa, 1.5 mm lata. Labellum integerrimum, rotundatum, cordatum, a basi labelli ad apicem 1.5 mm longum ; auriculae minutae, obtusae ; in disco callus elongatus. Columna crassiuscula, circiter 1.5 mm longa. Capsula ellipsoidalis 9 mm longa. Luzon, Province of Bataan, Mount Mariveles, Bur. Sci. 1674 F. W. Foa- worthy, October 17, 1906, terrestrial, 800 m above sea level. (Type in Hb. Bur. Sci.; duplicate in Hb. Ames.) The flowers of this species are similar to those of M. balabacensis and M. Ramosii. In aspect, however, the plant is quite distinctive. The elongated peduncles, which are wand-like and conspicuously tall, are characteristic. Three- fourths of the peduncle, at least, is floriferous. The specimens examined bear two large leaves, the upper one lanceolate, the lower one ovate, a and near the base a foliaceous bract. The flowers are caducous, consequently the peduncles, in mature specimens, seem to have the flowers crowded in short racemes. Malaxis benguetensis sp. nov.. Herba 1-2.2 dm alta. Caulis crassus vix bulbosus, vaginis tectus, usque ad 4 cm longus. Folia 3°vel 4, vix petiolata, ovato-lanceolata, acuminata, acuta, 3-9 cm longa, 1.2-3.7 cm lata (rarissime 3 cm longa), 44 AMES. J nervosa, chartacea. Pedunculus erectus, 8-15 cm longus, foliis longior. Racemus cylindricus, sublaxiflorus, 37.5 cm longus, in sicco 1.5 em in diametro. Bracteae lineari-lanceolatae, acuminatae, circiter 6 mm longae, dependentes. Flores numerosi, fusco-virides vel purpurascentes. Sepala lateralia elliptica, circiter 2 mm longa, 1.5 mm lata, 1-nervia. Sepalum dorsale ovatum, 2.5 mm longum, 1-1.25 mm latum, obtusum, 1-nervium. Petala linearia, obtusa, 1-nervia, circiter 2.5 mm longa, 0.75 mm lata. Labellum obscure trilobatum, concayum, late cordato-hastatum, 2.5 mm longum, 3 mm latum; lobis lateralibus vix distinctis, rotundatis; lobus medius rotundatus, obtusus, callo crescentiforme in margine. Coluwmna brevis, crassiuscula. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Pauai, Bur. Sci. 8362 McGregor, June, 1909, altitude 2,100 m. ¥ The material at hand exhibits a wide range of variation in measurements. The labellum is round heart-shaped or broadly and bluntly hastate. From the base a distinct vein emerges on each side and extends round the circular de- pression of the lip and is thickened along the innner margin of the middle lobe to form a crescent-shaped membranaceous callus. Malaxis Curranii sp. noy. Aff. M. latifoliae, at triplo minor. Herba usque ad 2 dm alta, gracilis, folia 3. Caulis +3 em longus vix incrassatus. Folia lanceolata, acuminata, acuta, breviter petiolata, 5-10 em longa, circiter 1.5 cm lata, chartacea, nervosa. Vadis gracilis, angulatus, foliis longior, 9-15 cm longus. Racemus compactus, cylindricus, 1-2.5 cm longus, 5 mm in diametro ; flores plures, parvi, luteo-virides. Bracteae lineari-lanceolatae, setaceae. Sepala lateralia elliptico-oblonga, obtusa, 3-nervia, 3 mm longa, 1.5 mm lata. Sepalum dorsale simile. Petala lineari-oblanceolata, acuta, 1-nervia, 3 mm longa, 0.5 mm lata. Labellum cymbiforme, 2 mm lon- gum, auriculis parvis, apice trilobo, lobis latoratibus obtusis, medio sub- acuto longiore, lanceolato; lobi laterales minuti; lobus medius 1 mm longus. Columna brevis, Luzon, Benguet, Subprovince, For. Bur. 5105 Curran, August 16, 1906, open pine forest, The differences between M. Curranii and typical M. latifolia are chiefly habital. The habit of the Species here proposed is quite distinctive, The floral details, however, are not sufficiently unlike I. latifolia to be easily emphasized in a description. The shorter, more slender peduncle and raceme, and the acute middle lobe of the labellum must be relied on in differentiating the Philippine material from typical M. latifolia. Malaxis latifolia Smith in Rees’s Cycl. 22, No. 3. Microstylis congesta Reichb. f. in Walp. Ann. 6: 206. Malawis plicata Roxb. Fl. Ind. 3: 456. Dienia congesta Lindl, in Wall. Cat. no. 1936. NOTES ON PHILIPPINE ORCHIDS, III. 45 In the Herbarium of the Bureau of Science there are two specimens which in my opinion belong to this species. One of theSe is typical, the other’ has purplish flowers and probably represents the variety fusca. Luzon, Rizal Province, Bur. Sci. 4667 Mawimo Ramos, August, 1907. Var. fusca cf. Ridley in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. 24: 335. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Bur. Sci. 3492 Major H. A. Mearns, July, 1907. M. latifolia is a variable species which is found in Java, Sumatra, Borneo, Siam, China, New Guinea and Australia. (Cf. fig. CLXXXV in the third volume of plates which accompany J. J. Smith’s “De Orchideen von Java”). Malaxis Macgregorii sp. nov. Planta foliosa. Caulis vix incrassatus. Folia 6-9, lanceolata, acum- inata, acuta, multinervia, 5-11 cm longa, 3 em lata. Petiolus latus, vaginans, 3 cm longus. JInflorescentia cum pedunculo 1.5 dm longa, foliis longior. Flores in racemo laxo languente, circiter 1 cm distantes. Bracteae lineari-lanceolatae dependentes. Sepala lateralia elliptica, ob- tusa, 3 mm longa. Sepalum dorsale simile. Petala lineari-oblonga, circiter 2mm longa. Labellum 4 mm longum, auriculatum ; lobus medius subquadratus, ad apicem bifidus; auriculae magnae; in sinu utroque prope basim lobi medii dentes 2 stant. PoLitLo, Bur. Sci. 10440 R. C. McGregor, October 19, 1909, terrestrial. Malaxis Macgregorti is nearly allied to M. dentata Ames and to Microstylis micrantha Hook. f. (cf. “Icones Plantarum” pl. 1834). The flowers of Malawis dentata are smaller, however, and the different middle lobe of the labellum is quite distinctive. - According to field notes the flowers of M. Macgregorii are Tose-carmine, Malaxis Ramosii sp. nov. Herba 1-2 dm alta in anthesi. Caulis brevis, circiter 3 cm longus. Folia 3, lanceolata, acuminata, acuta, 4-10 cm longa, 1.5-3 cm lata, nervosa. Pedunculus 7-16 cm longus, foliis longior. Bracteae lineari- lanceolatae acuminatae, acutae; 3 mm longae, dependentes. Racemus usque ad 9 em longus. Flores 3-5 mm distantes, cirea 9 mm in diametro. Pedicelli circiter 6 mm longi. Sepala lateralia ovata, 3-nervia, 4 mm longa, 3 mm lata. Sepalum dorsale ovato-lanceolatum, 3-nervium, 5 mm longum, 3 mm latum. Petala rhombico-lanceolata, 4.75 mm longa, 3 mm lata, 3-nervium. JLabellum integerrimum, rotundatum, a basi labelli ad apicem 2 mm longum; awriculae oblongae, obtusae, 1 mm longae. Columna brevis, ad basim columnae dens, vel papilla a tergo. Luzon, Rizal Province, Bosoboso, Bur. Sci. 4567 Maximo Ramos, August 14, 1907. MU. Ramosii is closely allied to M. balabacensis from which it differs in its smaller size and larger flowers. The petals of M. balabacensis are narrower in relation to their length and not so rhombic as those of M. Ramosii; then again the peduncles of M. balabacensis are much longer in relation to the leaves. 46 AMES. Malaxis rizalensis sp. nov. Aff. M. purpureae. Caulis brevis, 3-4 cm longus, vix incrassatus. Folia 3-5, lanceolata vel ovato-lanceolata, acuminata, acuta, petiolata; lamina 6-13 cm longa, 2.5-4.5 em lata. Petiolus vaginans, 2.5-3.5 em longus. Tota planta usque ad 2.2 dm alta. Pedunculus 9-17 em longus, foliis longior. Racemus circiter 9 cm longus, laxiflorus, flores purpurei. Bracteae lineari-lanceolatae, 5 mm longae, dependentes. Pedicelli usque ad 7 mm longi. Sepala lateralia elliptica valde obtusa, 4-nervia, 3.5 mm longa, 1.5 mm lata. Sepalum dorsale oblongum, obtusum, 4.5 mm longum, circiter 1.5 mm latum. Petala lineari-oblonga, obtusa, 3-nervia, 4mm longa, 1 mm lata. Labellum magnum, ovato-cordatum, obscure 3-lobatum ; lobus medius bifidus, 3 mm longus, 3 mm latus ; lobi laterales obtusi, minuti, producti in auriculas magnas, obtusas, inter quas columna prominet. Auriculae oblongae 2 mm longae, 1.5 mm latae in sicco ner- vosae. Columna crassiuscula. a : ‘Luzon, Rizal Province, Bosoboso, Bur. Sci. 4561 Maaimo Ramos, August, 1907. (Type in Hb. Bur, Sci., no duplicate) . : Mf. rizalensis is a very near ally of M. purpurea and when studied with the aid of more material than I possess may prove to be conspecific with it. The stems are short and ,the leaves are not conspicuously congested. At least my material is clearly differentiated from Zollinger’s no. 2536 (Hb. British Museum of Natural History) cited by Ridley under Microstylis purpurea in the “Revision of the Genera Microstylis and Malaxis,” and by J. J. Smith in “Die Orchideen von Java.” The labellum of M. rizalensis resembles in general outline that of M. Hutchinsoniana (cf. Ames, Orchidaceae 2: 128) but is distinguish- able from it by its bifid apex, the divisions of which are oblong, obtuse, 1.5 mm long. M. Wallichii is a near ally of our species. Malaxis uncata sp. nov. M. sagittatae (J. J. Sm.) affinis. Caulis brevis vix incrassatus, usque ad 2cm longus. Folia breviter petiolata, 3, quorum unum parvulum est. Lamina lanceolata, breviter acuminata, acuta, glabra, 5-nervia. Folium infimum usque ad 2 em longum. Folium superam 8 cm longum, 2.5-3 em latum. Pedunculus elongatus, gracilis, 11-18 cm longus. Bracteae dependentes, lineari-lanceolatae, setaceae, valde acutae, plus minus 5 mm longae. Pedicelli elongati, usqué ad 1 em longi. Flores flavidi. Sepala lateraliaelliptica, ad apicem rotundata, 3 mm longa, 2 mm lata. Sepalum posticum ovato-lanceolatum, obtusum, 3-nervium, 3.5 mm longum, 2.5 mm latum. Petala linearia, 1-nervia, 4 mm longa, 0.5 mm lata. La- bellum integerrimum, late sagittatum ; auriculis obtusis 1.5 mm longis. Discus usque ad 2 mm longus. Callus bilobus in disco medio. Columna crassiuscula, 1 mm longa, a tergo, prope basim, dens uncinatus. Capsula ellipsoidalis, 6~8 mm longa. : Luzon, Laguna-Tayabas Provinces, For. Bur. 9552 H. M. Curran, March, 1908. M. uncata is closely allied to Malaxis Sagittata (J. J. Sm.) (Microstylis sagittata J. J. Sm. Ie. Bog. 2: t. OVIL, C., Die Orchideen von Java 252), from which it differs in its narrower leaves, yellowish-flowers, broader upper sepal and more broadly sagittate lip. NOTES ON PHILIPPINE ORCHIDS, III. 47 The type collection consists of two plants, preserved in the Herbarium of the Bureau of Science. Unfortunately both plants are in fruit so that my descrip- tion is based on terminal flowers. The flowers in dried specimens are yellowish. 161. CESTICHIS Prfitzer. Cestichis Lyonii sp. nov. Radices multae, fibratae. Pseudobulbi fasciculati, 2 cm longi, com- planati, in sicco usque ad 1.5 cm in crassitudine, rugosi. Folia bina, oblongi-lanceolata, acuta, utrinque glabra, 6.5-8.5 cm longa, 1-1.5 em lata, coriacea, in petiolos desinentia. Petiolus brevis, 5 mm longus. Ped- unculus terminalis, bialatus, foliis longior, usque ad 23 cm longus, erectus. Bracteae lineari-lanceolatae, setaceae, elongatae, 1 cm longae. Racemus longissimus, densus, usque ad 12 cm longus. Bracteae inflorescentiae lanceolatae, acutae, 2-4 mm longae, pedicellum et ovarium excedentes. Flores flavidi. Sepala lateralia oblongi-lanceolata, acuta, valde uninervia, 4.5 mm longa, 2mm lata. Sepaluwm intermedium simile. Petala linearia, uninervia, 4 mm longa. Labellum orbiculare subito acuminatum, 5- nervium, 4 mm longum, circiter 3 mm latum. Colwmna exalata, cras- siuscula, 2 mm longa. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Baguio, 155 W. S. Lyon (type in Hb, Ames). ~ Minporo, Mount Inauan, For. Bur. 9959 M. L. Merritt, January 22, 1908, 1,300 m altitude (single specimen in Hb. Bureau of Science). The labellum is orbicular and at the apex abruptly contracted into an obtuse tip. The pseudobulbs in dried specimens have the appearance of having been strongly compressed or flattened when fresh. 162. OBERONIA Lindl. Oberonia cylindrica Lindl. Bot. Reg. 1840, Mise. 20, Fol. Orch. Oberonia 2; Ames Orchidaceae 1: 77. This species appears to be very common in northern Luzon. The material from which Lindley obtained his original and very brief description was imported from Manila by Messrs. Loddiges. From Lindley’s description, in the “Botanical Register,” it is quite impossible to identify with any degree of surety plants which may prove conspecific with O. cylindrica. Furthermore, his remarks in “Folia Orchidacea’” are inconclusive. In neither work does he refer to foliage, although in “Folia Orchidacea” he places O. cylindrica in the same section with O. iridifolia, among the acaulescent species which have radical leaves. In order to obtain light on the subject I sent a specimen, representative of material which I had identified with Lindley’s species, to Kew, where it was carefully compared with the type. This comparison verified my conclusions and also revealed the fact that Lindley’s specimen is destitute of foliage, consisting of the inflorescence only. For a description, supplementary to Lindley’s, reference should be made to my list of Philippine orchids published in the first volume of “Orchidaceae.” Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Mount Pulog, Elmer D. Merrill 6573, May, 1909, Bur. Sci. 8823 R. C. McGregor, July, 1909, H. B. Copeland s. n., 2,300 m altitude, in mossy forest, May 12, 1909; Mount Tonglon, Bur. Sci. 5476 Maximo Ramos, December, 1908; Baguio, R. S. Williams 1082, 1904: Bontoe Subprovince, Father M. Vanoverbergh, 407%, 1910 (specimen in fruit). 48 AMES. 172. PODOCHILUS BI. This is an intricate genus with which it is almost impossible to do satisfactory work owing to the fragmentary condition of the specimens usually found in herbaria. One must rely to a large extent on descrip- tions and these are too frequently inadequate because of the similarity between many of the species. Podochilus fenixii sp. nov. , Caules plus minus 3 dm alti, simplices, graciles. Folia oblongi-lan- ceolata inferne, superne linearia, acuminata, plus minus 5 cm longa, 3-11 mm lata; utrinque glabra, usque ad 4 mm in crassitudine in sicco, nervo intermedio in apiculum minutum producto. JInflorescentia termi- nalis et lateralis brevis. Racemus pauciflorus, foliis multo brevior. Pedunculus cum racemo usque ad 1.5 cm longus. Bracteae cymbiformes ovatae, acuminatae, acutae, 4 mm longae, inferne imbricatae. Flores albi. Sepala lateralia ovato-lanceolata, acuminata, acuta, 3-nervia, 4 mm longa, ad basim 2.5 mm lata. Sepalum dorsale concavum, ovatum, obtu- sum, plus minus 3 mm longum. Petala oblonga, vel oblongi-lanceolata, acuta, 3-nervia, 2.75 mm longa. Labellum oblongum, obtusum, 4.75 mm longum, ad basim saccatum; prope apicem labelli tuberculum minutum, post quod callus multo major; prope basim labelli callus cucullatus, V-formis. ae BaTanes IsLanps, Batan, Santo Domingo de Basco, Bur. Sci. 8794 Eugenio Fénia, June 8, 1907. In habit, if we except the inflorescence, this species resembles very closely P. dendrobioides Schlechter. The labellum is distinctive as it bears three calli; one at the apex, a minute protuberance; one near the middle, a transversely situated keel or cushion, and one near the base, this last being V-shaped, cucullate at its closed end. In several of the specimens examined the racemes are num- erous. They arise from the axils of the leaves beginning at about the middle of the stem, and are produced with few interruptions from there to the summit. . Podochilus (§ Appendicula) fruticosus sp. nov. Caulis ramosus, 3 dm longus. Folia oblonga, 1-2 cm longa, 2-4 mm lata, ad apicem inaequaliter bilobata. Flores terminales et laterales, in capitulis bracteatis. Bracteae acutae, 3 mm longae. Sepala lateralia triangularia, 3-nervia, acuta, 2.5 mm longa, 2 mm lata ad basim. Petala lineari-oblonga, obtusa, 1-nervia, 1.75 mm longa. Labellum 3 mm longum, breviter unguiculatum ; lamina obovata vel suborbicularis. Mrnpanao, Camp Keithley, Lake Lanao, Mary Strong Clemens s. n. (type), September, 1907, Plant much branched, the branches bearing numerous heads of flowers in the axils of the small linear-oblong leaves. On the same plant flower buds ana fruits oecur. The fruits, which are about 6 mm long, exceed the rigid, nervose bracts. In all the specimens examined the leaves show a strong tendency to fall off, consequently herbarium specimens consist chiefly of naked stems and the NOTES ON PHILIPPINE ORCHIDS, III. 49 persistent flower heads. The lip is orbicular when spread out, but in its normal state is rather obovate, obtuse. The callus is basal and V-shaped, the wings extend along the margin to the apical third of the lip where they converge. Podochilus (§ Appendicula) malindangensis sp. nov. Planta 5 dm alta, robusta, glabra. Folia oblongi-lanceolata vel ellip- tica, disticha, coriacea, 4 cm longa, 1 em lata. Jnflorescentia lateralis, 2.5-3 em longa; rhachis fractiflexus. lores in racemo brevi. Bracteae cymbiformes, acutae, 8.5 mm longae, ovario longiores. Sepala lateralia mentum obtusum formantia, triangulari-lanceolata, acuta, 3-nervia, 4.5 . mm longa, 4 mm lata ad basim. Sepaluwm dorsale lanceolatum, 3-nervium, 44.5 mm longum, subacutum. Petala oblonga, 1-nervia, 4 mm longa, 1.5 mm lata. Labellum ut in P. pendulo, oblongum vel subquadratum, 4 mm longum, 7-nervium. MINDANAO, Province of Misamis, Mount Malindang, For. Bur. 4733 Major BE. A. Mearns & W. I. Hutchinson, May 25, 1906, at 1,700 m altitude. P. malindangensis is a tall, rather strict species which in general aspect resembles P. micranthus. The labellum is oblong or subquadrate, obtuse, with a large pocket or cup near the base formed by a transversely situated membrane. The lateral sepals are united at the base and form a rounded mentum. In the type material the characteristically large flowers are borne on lateral peduncles which oecur on stems from which the leaves have fallen. Leafy stems destitute of flowers occur on the ‘same plant with the naked flower-bearing stems. It is probable that as the flowering stems are the most mature the leaves fall off during the drying process, but notwithstanding this probability the specimens are in general aspect unlike others of the genus from the Philippines. When dry the flowers are blackish, when fresh they were described by the collectors as “dark-blue.” é Podochilus (§ Apista) Robinsonii sp. nov. Caules 1 dm alti, graciles, basibus foliorum vaginantibus tecti. Folia lanceolata, 1.3 cm longa, 2-3 mm lata, coriacea. Inflorescentia terminalis. Pedunculus cum racemo 3.5 em longus. Bracteae minutae, acutae, 1 mm longae. Flores minuti, flavi. Sepala 3 mm longa, connata, tubum for- mantia, partes terminales 1.5 mm longae, liberae, subacutae. Petala uninervia, dolabriformia, vel triangula breviter unguiculata, 3.5 mm longa. Labellum cordatum ad basim sagittatum breviter unguiculatum, 3-ner- vium, 2.5 mm longum, 2.25 mm latum. Luzon, Camarines Province, Maagnas, Bur. Sci. 6371 C. B. Robinson, August 27, 1908, altitude above sea 200-400 meters. Here also I refer material collected on Canlaon Voleano, Island of Negros, by C, 8. Banks in June, 1906, Bur. Sci. 1137. In general aspect this species resembles P. strictus Ames and P. scalpelliformis Bl. It is easily distinguished from these by its broader leaves, longer rac- emes and very different petals. The sepals are connate as in P. scalpelliformis. The rigid bracts give to the raceme a pectinate aspect. In dried specimens the lcaves appear to have been twisted slightly. 100004———4 m0 bow Garden 10 HO AMES. 176. AGROSTOPHYLLUM BI. ' Agrostophyllum malindangense sp. nov. Caules usque ad 2.5 dm longi, ad basim 2 mm in crassitudine, fasci- culati, teretes, exiles inferne, superne sensim dilatati vaginis foliorum tecti; vaginae foliorum imbricatae, persistentes, nitidae, flavidae, prope apicem caulis inflatae, (in sicco ?) marginibus nigricantes. Folia usque ad 1 dm longa, prope basim 4 mm lata, linearia, acuminata, acuta, coriacea, ad basim rotundata, nervo intermedio prominente praedita. Inflores- centia terminalis dense capitata globosa, multiflora, 1.5 em in diametro. Bracteae exteriores rigidae, lanceolatae, floribus longiores ; bracteae inter- iores obtusae, floribus breviores, glumaceae. Pedicelli cum ovario 5.5 mm longi. Flores flavidi, conferti. Sepala lateralia oblongi-lanceolata, acuta, uninervia, 3 mm longa, ad basim 2 mm lata. Sepalwm dorsale simile. Petala valde linearia, uninervia, 3 mm longa. Labellwm carno- sum, 3-lobatum, hypochilio obtuso, valde scrotiforme, lamella transversa integra ab epichilio separato. Epichilium cupulam formans. Lobi laterales minuti, paene obsoleti. Columna crassa, 3.5 mm longa. Mindanao, Province of Misamis, Mount Malindang, For. Bur. 4610 Mearns & Hutchinson, May 25, 1906, altitude 1,700 m. . 178. CERATOSTYLIS BI. \ f Ceratostylis philippinensis Rolfe ex Ames Orch, 1: 79, with fig. Among the orchids collected on Mount Mariveles by Elmer D. Merrill and sent alive in 1905 to North Easton was this interesting species which has grown luxuriantly in my collection, forming dense tuffs of semiterete leaves from the axils of which the sweet-scented, snow-white flowers emerge in August and September. The margin of the lip is slightly revolute near the middle and on the disk beyond the middle are two inconspicuous papillose calli. This species has also been collected recently by R. C. McGregor, Bur. Sci. 8447, near Pauai, Benguet Subprovince, Luzon, at an altitude of 2,100 m. . 218. PHAIUS Lour. Phaius flavus Lindl. Gen. Sp. Orch. Pl. 128. The material which I refer here may be conspecific with P. philippinensis N. E. Brown, a species which I have not seen. There are several details, however, in Mr. Brown’s description which do not agree with my specimens. The entire lip of my plant suggests P. philippinensis, also the thin keels on the disk. On the other hand P. flavus is a very variable species and P. philippinensis may be one of its variants. Mr. Brown’s description refers to the fugaceous floral bracts. In my material the bracts are persistent. Luzon, Lepanto-Bontoe region, Bur. Sci. 5616 Dean CQ. Worcester, July 8, 1907, flowers with a rather rank odor, yellow, fringe of lip brown-purple. 230. ACANTHOPHIPPIUM BI. Acanthophippium Mantinianum L. Lind. & Cogn. Journ. des Orch. 7: 138. Roots fleshy, elongated. Stems 12 cm long, gradually tapering upward from a broad base, jointed. Leaves 2, plicate, ovate-oblong, petiolate, up — NOTES ON PHILIPPINE ORCHIDS, III. 51 to 3 dm long, 9 cm wide. Raceme 5-flowered, bracts eymbiform up to 3 em long. Sepals about 3 cm long. Petals rhomboidal, obtuse. Label- lum 3-lobed, lateral lobes dolabriform, about 5 mm long, 5 mm wide, middle lobe obtuse, about 7 mm long. Disk lamellate, lamellae 5, fleshy, prominent. This peculiar species, which was originally introduced from the Philippine Is- lands, and described by Linden and Cogniaux in “Le Journal des Orchidées” in 1896, has just come to hand from Luzon, where it was collected by Father M. Vanoverbergh. The flowers are yellowish with dark spots and the labellum is nearly white. My knowledge of the species, unfortunately, is based on the original description and not on an examination of the type material. I have seen no other specimen of Acanthophippiwm from the Philippines. 232. PACHYSTOMA BI. Pachystoma pubescens Bl. Bijdr. 376. Pachychilus pubescens Bl. Mus. Bot. Lugd. Bat. 2: 173. I refer to this species several specimens recently collected in Luzon. They agree with the material figured in detail by Blume and with a Javan plant preserved in the herbarium of the British Museum of Natural History, collected by Horsfield. aS Luzon, Cagayan Province, Bur. Sci. 7969 Maaimo Ramos, April 3, 1909, flowers “dark-purplish:” Lepanto Subprovince, Bur. Sci. 7050 Ramos, January 24, 1909, flowers ‘violet :” Benguet Subprovince, For. Bur. 10942 H. M. Curran, January 14, 1909, in grass lands, pine-covered hills, flowers “pink,” altitude 1,500 m: Rizal Province, Bur. Sci. 6774 C. B. Robinson, May 18, .1909, flowers “lilac, lip golden-yellow except on margin in front.” 235. EULOPHIA R. Br. Eulophia dentata sp. nov. Mea sententia E. venosae Reichb. f. affinis. Radices ? Caulis erectus usque ad 5.5 dm longus, bracteis scariosis vaginantibus instructus; foliis carens. Bracteae tubulares, supra dilatatae, acuminatae, setaceae, imbri- catae inferne, superne distantes, 2-4 cm longae. Bracteae inflorescentiae scariosae, lineares, setaceae, usque ad 2 cm longae, flore longiores. Racemus sublaxiflorus, 7-10 cm longus, circiter 4 cm in diametro. Flores albi et purpurei, 12 mm longi, nutantes. Pedicelli pergraciles, 5-9 mm longi. Ovarium 5-7 mm longum. Sepala lateralia oblonga, 5-nervia, 1.5 cm longa, 3 mm lata, acuta. Sepalum dorsale simile, basi leviter attenuatum. Petala oblongi-lanceolata, 3-nervia, 12 mm longa, 3 mm lata. Labellum ovatum, 3-lobatum, inferne in calcar productum. Lobi laterales rotundati, leviter crenulati, circiter 2 mm longi, 2 mm lati, sparsim papillosi; Jobus medius suborbicularis, margine valde dentatus ; discus ad basim leviter tricarinatus, ad medium et prope apicem papillis et processibus numerosis. Papillae et processus inaequales. Processus complanati, usque ad 2 mm longi. Calcar obtusum, 3.5 mm longum. ' Columna 4 mm longa, ad apicem dilatata. 52 AMES. Luzon, Bontoc Subprovince, For, Bur. 17035 H. M. Curran, January 26, 1909, very common in open grass lands. : From the specimens at hand Eulophia dentata appears to be a leafless species closely allied to Eulophia venosa Reichb. f. 276. DENDROBIUM Sw. Dendrobium (§ Aporum) indivisum Miquel FI]. Ind. Bat. 3: 630. D., lwnatum Lindl. in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. 3: 4. This is apparently a common species in the Philippine Islands where it is found growing on trees along the coast and inland. The flattened, erect stems, triangular distichous leaves and terminal inflorescence are quite characteristic. According to the field notes of collectors the small flowers are pale-yellow marked with purple. The lunate labellum and conspicuous callus serve to distinguish this species from its congeners in the Philippines. : : In Lindley’s Herbarium the Cuming plant, which I take to be the type of D. lunatum Lindl., appears to be conspecific with D. indivisum. Lindley’s sketch of the flower agrees very well with the figure on Plate XIII of Presl’s “Reliquiae Haenkeanae,” although the general habit of the Cuming specimen is not exactly like that of the majority of the specimens recently collected in the Philippines. Surv ArcurpPeraco, Merrill 3003, plants growing on low rocky bluffs along the seashore, 1907. Luzon, Province of Bataan, Lamao, Mount Mariveles, For. Bur, 2753 T. E. Borden, March, 1905, on tree trunks in mossy forest, 900 m above sea level: Province of Zambales, Mount Pinatubo, Bur. Sci. 2616 Fox- worthy, April 25, 1907, on trees on very dry mesa, 700 m above sea level. Dendrobium platycaulon Rolfe in Kew Bull. (1892) 139, : This species bloomed in the orchid collection of the Bureau of Science in November, 1909. According to notes which accompany the specimens submitted for identification the exact locality from which they were obtained and the name of the collector who discovered them are unknown. They certainly were Phil- ippine. As Mr. Rolfe states, this species resembles Dendrobium lamellatum. The pseudobulbs, however, are longer and narrower in relation to their length and the flowers are larger than in that species. In the notes which are appended to the original description of D. platycaulon the flowers are said to exceed an inch in length. In the specimens I have examined the flowers are scarcely an inch long, but in other details they agree very well with Mr. Rolfe’s description. D. platycaulon is a curious species with flattened pseudobulbs, which are about 11 em long, 2.5 em wide and only a few millimeters thick; they are contracted into a slender terete base; the leaves are oblong-lanceolate, larger than the pseudobulbs and somewhat similar to them in outline. The specimens examined were apparently 3, or 4-leaved. The flowers are nearly white, and fragrant when fresh. They close in a short time and turn yellow. They are few in , number and borne near the apex of the leafless pseudobulbs. Dendrobium scopa Lindl. Bot. Reg. (1842) Misc. 55. What I take to be specimens of this species have been received from Mr. W. §. Lyon who collected them in Tarlac Province. Mr. Lyon in his field notes describes the plants as terrestrial, growing among rocks. The flowers, which were open in June, were white, cinnamon-scented, the finely fringed lip being straw-yellow. The flowers are not showy but on account of the peculiarly fringed lip are of exceptional interest and very curious. The sepals and petals are similar, linear-oblong, about 15 mm long. The labellum is oblong, the apex 4 s NOTES ON PHILIPPINE ORCHIDS, III. 53 broken up into a delicate spreading fringe the filaments of which are about 5 mm long. Lindley’s type specimen, for an excellent sketch of which I am indebted to Doctor Prain, is perhaps stouter than my plants, but in other respects matches them perfectly. The labellum of D. scopa is well illustrated in Lindley’s her- - barium by a colored drawing. In outline and in general aspect this drawing agrees very well with the labellum of the plants collected by Mr. Lyon. Dendrobium scopa is referred to in J. J. Smith’s “Die Orchideen von Java” as probably related to D. comatum Lindl. From the specimens at hand it would seem to be more nearly allied to D. angulatum in the form of the lip, but differs from that species in detail. Luzon, Tarlac Provinee, W. 8. Lyon 110. (ai 276. SARCOPODIUM Lindl. In the “Orchid Review” for August, 1910 (18: 237) Mr. R. A. Rolfe gives a list of twenty-one species, usually referred to Dendrobium, which he regards as constituents of a distinct genus, namely Sarcopodium. This genus was originally proposed by Lindley for the inclusion of a small group of species which Reichenbach f. referred to Bulbophyllum. At — present only three Philippine species of Sarcopodium are known. All of these have recently been described. S. acuminatum Krianzl. was the first to be discovered, S. Lyonii Rolfe (S. acuminatum var. Lyonit Kriinzl.) the second, and S. stella silvae Kranzl. & Loher, a species which I have not seen, the third. i In its brief history Sarcopodium Lyonti has accumulated an interesting synonymy as follows: Sarcopodium Lyonii R. A. Rolfe in Orch. Rev. 18: 240. Dendrobium Lyonii Ames Orch, 2: 177. D. acuminatum Kriinzl. Orchis 2: 73, not Rolfe. Sarcopodium acuminatum var. Lyonii Krinzl. in Fedde Rep. 7: 40. In view of Doctor Krinzlin’s treatment of S. Lyonii, Mr. Rolfe’s opinion in the “Orchid Review” is of interest. He says 8. Lyonii is allied to 8. acumin- atum, but has larger rosy-carmine flowers with a darker lip. “It has been con- fused with the preceding,’ and I believe includes all the plants which have been recently exhibited under the name D. acuminatum, also the figure in Gard. Chron. 1907, ii, p. 210, fig. 88; 1909, ii. p. 150, fig. 64; Gard. Mag. 1909, pp. 649, 660, with fig.; Journ. Hort., 1902, ii, p. 291, with fig.; Orechis ii, p. 73, t. 16." : ; 280. PHREATIA Lindl. Phreatia prorepens Reichb. f. Otia Bot. Hamb. (1878) 54. ~ Up to the present I had seen only the material in the Gray Herbarium identified by Reichenbach and the specimens collected by Merrill on Mount Haleon. The collection under consideration was made by McGregor and is of unusual interest as it is composed of numerous specimens which exhibit a wide range of variation, some of the scapes approximating 2 dm in length. The variation in the leaves is also notable, ranging from the ligulate form char- 7 Sarcopodium acuminatum, , 54 AMES. acteristic of the type to broadly lanceolate. As a rule the scapes exceed the leaves considerably and bear spikes of white flowers which appear to be more rigid than in the other material I have examined. The structure of the flowers is very similar in the plants from Mount Haleon and in those collected by Me- Gregor, so that variation seems to be purely vegetative. P. prorepens is closely related to P, acuminata J. J. Smith, from which it appears to differ chiefly in the size of the floral parts. In Lindley’s herbarium at Kew there are two Javan species of Phreatia mounted on the same sheet. One of these, a plant collected by Junghuhn (no. 207), belongs to § Hbulbosac. The other, a plant collected by Lobb, belongs to § Bulbosae and is probably conspecific with P. acuminata. In habit it closely resembles P. prorepens and may be a form of that species. From my material it is quite impossible to distinguish P. acuminata from P. prorepens. In “Die Orchideen von Java,” J. J. Smith distinguishes P. acuminata by the floral bracts being shorter than the ovaries. In my material I find some of the bracts conspicuously shorter than the ovaries, and some longer. Luzon, Benguet Subproyince, Panai, Bur, Sci. 8363 R. 0. McGregor, June, 1909. 383, CLEISOSTOMA Bl. Cleisostoma Kunstleri Hook. f. Icon. Pl. IV 4: pl. 2335. I refer to this species, which was originally collected at Perak by Kunstler, material from the Island of Polillo. Leaves coriaceous, oblong, at the apex unequally bilobed, 2 dm long, 3-4.4 cm wide. Scape terete, 2.5 mm in diameter. Bracts few, obtuse, 5 mm long. Inflorescence laxly paniculate, many-flowered. Floral bracts minute, acute, much shorter than the pedicels of the purplish flowers. Lateral sepals oblong, obtuse, 3.5 mm long, 1.25 mm wide. Upper sepal oblong or oblanceolate, obtuse, 5 mm long, 1.5 mm wide. Petals linear-oblong, obtuse, 4.5-5 mm long,1mm wide. Labellum saccate, 3-lobed. Sac scrotiform, 3 mm long, with a posterior scale within, the scale oblong, membranaceous, bifid at the tip, each division obscurely emarginate. Lateral lobes minute, triangular, less than 1 mm long, middle lobe suborbicular, 1.5 mm long. Pouitio, Bur. Sci. 10444 R. OC. McGregor, September 25, 1909, on tree trunks. 286. BULBOPHYLLUM Thou. (§ Cirrhopetalum) . Bulbophyllum chryseum comb. nov. Cirrhopetalum chryseum Kriinzl. in Fedde Rep. 8: 97. This is a member of the section Cirrhopetalum, characterized by a solitary flower at the summit of the scape. The only other described species from the Philippines which are thus characterized are the ones very briefly described by Lindley, namely B. antenniferum and B. mawillare, which are remarkable on account of their very large flowers. I have not seen the type of B. chrysewm but my material agrees almost in detail with Krinzlin’s description. Furthermore the collections in the Bureau of Science Herbarium contain no other Species of the small, single flowered type which belongs to § Oirrhopetalum that would indicate B. chryseum to be one of a group. Consequently I am morally sure that my identification is correct. The only other described species of § Cirrhopetalum from the Philippines, char- acterized by a solitary flower, are the two mentioned above, and these are sharply distinguished by the extraordinary size of their flowers, these being among the largest in the section. NOTES ON PHILIPPINE ORCHIDS, III. 5D I have seen no material from the Philippines which agrees with B. anten- niferum and B. mazillare. In the Herbarium of the Bureau of Science there are two plants which approach them in aspect but which represent very different species. My knowledge of B. antenniferum and B. mawillere is based on sketches of the types kindly given to me by Doctor Prain. Luzon, Rizal Province, Bur. Sci. 3076 Maximo Ramos, flowers yellow. (Speci- men flowering in Manila, January 21, 1908) > Bulbophyllum Cumingii Reichb. f. in Walp. Ann. 6: 261. Cirrhopetalum Oumingii Lindl. Bot. Reg. 1843 sub t. 49; Bot. Mag. t. 4996. This species which Lindley described from specimens collected in the Phil- ippines by Cuming is apparently a rarity. The tetragonal pseudobulbs, oblong, coriaceous leaves, elongated scape and umbel of purplish flowers are char-. acteristic. : ; Necros, Cadiz, Bur. Sci. 7334 A. Celestino, March, 1909, For. Bur. 5227 Danao & Aspillera, June, 1906. Bulbophyllum Makoyanum Reichb. f. in Gard. Chron. 1879, 1: 234 in note. Cirrhopetal Makoyanum Reichb. f. in Gard. Chron. 1879, 1: 2384; Bot. Mag. t. 7259. ¢ This interesting species, which differs chiefly in color and minor details from B. Cumingii, has been discovered in the Philippines. The umbels of yellow flowers spotted with purple, which, according to the collector’s notes, give the plant the aspect of a sun-flower, are very distinctive. The elongated, narrowly linear lateral sepals radiate from the center of the umbel. The petals and upper sepal are fringed with yellow hairs. The labellum is fleshy and smooth. B. fimbriatum, which is a closely allied species, has two conspicuous teeth at the summit of the column. PotitLo, Bur. Sci. 10488 R. OC. McGregor, September 28, 1909, flowers pale- yellow speckled with burnt-carmine. Mrnpanao, Rev. R. F. Black s. n. 299. DIPODIUM R. Br. Dipodium paludosum Reichb. f. Xenia 2: 15. There are two specimens in the Herbarium of the Bureau of Science which according to materials at hand appear to be referable to this species, one from Negros, the other from Mindanao. The details of the labellum agree with the figure in the “Botanical Magazine” (t. 7464), although the lateral lobes or teeth are rather longer, measuring 4 mm in length. Unfortunately I possess no authentic material of D. palud r quently my identification is not so sure as I could wish. The identity of the genus, however, is beyond doubt and its addition to the Philippine flora through the specimens under consideration is of importance. ; Minvanao, Province of Surigao, F. H. Bolster, September, 1906. NercRos, Hi- mugaan, River, For. Bur. 7313 H. D. Bverett, April 10, 1907, 20 m altitude above the sea. : 376. LUISIA Gaudich. Luisia Ramosii sp. nov. Pianta +3 dm alta. Caulis plus minus 4 mm in crassitudine, vaginis foliorum tectus. Folia teretia, obtusa, in sicco valde rugosa, plus minus 1 dm longa, in sicco usque ad 3 mm in crassitudine, erecta vel adscen- dentia. Vaginae tubulosae, substriatae, persistentes. Flores flavidi, labello purpureo. Pedunculi breves, crassi, 2 cm longi. Bracteae inflo- 56 ; ‘ AMES, rescentiae rigidae, obtusae. Sepala lateralia cymbiformia, oblonga, cari- nata, 6 mm longa, 3 mm lata; carina in apiculum uncinatum producta. Sepalum dorsale elliptico-lanceolatum, 3-nervium, obtusum, 6 mm longum, 3.5 mm latum, breviter apiculatum. Petala falcato-ovata, obtusa, 3-nervia, 6 mm longa, 4 mm lata, nervis lateralibus ramosis. Labellum trilobum, 6 mm longum ; /obus medius triangulari-ovatus, 4 mm longus, 5 mm latus ; lobi laterales erecti columnam amplectentes, rotundati, 2 mm longi, 2 mm lati. Colwmna crassa. Luzon, Cagayan Province, Bur. Sci. 7970 Maximo Ramos, April 20, 1909. Luisia Ramosii is a stout plant, in habit similar to L. teretifolia. The lateral sepals are strongly keeled near the apex, the keel passing into an elongated, uncinate apicula, + Three species of Luisia are now known to be natives of the Philippine Is- _ lands: L. valida Reichb. f., L. Foxworthyi Ames and the present one. Of these L, valida is not known to me. The description does not agree with any of the Philippine material I have examined, still its brevity leaves much to be desired.. 402. TAENIOPHYLLUM BI. Taeniophyllum Merrillii sp. nov. Radices crassae, numerosae, plus minus 4 mm in crassitudine. Folia O. Scapus filiformis, usque ad 1.7 cm longus, hispidulus, nudus. Flores albi. Racemus brevis, 3-4 mm longus. Bracteae minutae 0.5 mm longae. Pedicelli plus minus 1 mm longi. Sepala lateralia oblongi-lanceolata, 1-nervia, 1.25-1.5 mm longa, 0.75 mm lata. Sepalum dorsale \ineari- oblongum. Petala lanceolata, 1 mm longa. Sepala lateralia petalaque prope basim connata. Labellum saccatum, integerrimum, 3 mm longum, ad apicem rotundatum. Luzon, Province of Bataan, Mount Mariveles, Merrill 3878, August, 1904, alti- tude above sea level about 800 m. This is a curious species composed of fleshy yellow-green roots 3-7 cm long, and filiform scapes. The minute flowers appear to open in succession. The lateral sepals appear to arise wholly from the lip and look like lateral lobes as their middle nerve continues from the base into the sac. _ \ THE PHILIPPINE JOURNAL oF Scrence, C. Borany. Vol. VI, No. 1, March, 1911. CONSPECTUS CYPERACEARUM INSULARUM PHILIP- PINENSIUM: CYPERACEAE-CARICOIDEAE. By G. KiKenTHAL. (Coburg, Germany.) Es ist erstaunlich, welche Fiille neuer Entdeckungen die intensive botanische Durchforschung der Philippinen in den letzten Jahren gezeitigt hat. Erst drei Jahre sind vergangen, seitdem.in diesem Journal? eine von C. B. Clarke zusammengestellte Liste der im Kew Herbarium vertre- tenen Cyperaceen des Inselreiches verdffentlicht wurde und schon ist ein golcher Zuwachs neuen Materials zu verzeichnen, dass eine ergiinzende Revision notwendig erschien. Durch die Giite des Herrn E. D. Merrill, Government Botanist, dem ich auch an dieser Stelle meinen ergebensten Dank abstatte, ist mir das gesammte in Manila befindliche Material der Caricoideae zuginglich gemacht worden. Weitere Beitriige erhielt ich von Herrn A. D. E. Elmer in Manila. Die ilteren Typen friiherer Sammler habe ich gelegentlich meiner Studien fiir das “Pflanzenreich” in Berlin und Kew eingesehen, so dass die folgende Liste, welcher auf Wunch des Herrn Merrill ein Schliissel vorausgeht, auf miglichste Vollstiindigkeit Anspruch erheben darf. Sie umfasst zuniichst die Caricoideae. Die anderen Unterfamilien sollen spiter folgen. Ein vorgesetztes * bedeutet, dass die betreffende Art oder Form in Clarke’s Liste fehlt. Jeder Art ist das Citat ihrer Stelle in meiner Monographie? hinzugefiigt. | Subfamilia CartcomEAE Pax. 1. Rhacheola secundaria ex utriculo exserta unciformis -..............-----...- 1. Uneinia 1. Rhacheola plerumque deficit; si adest, inclusa rarissime exserta, sed tunc semper recta occurrit : 2. Carex * Cyperaceae of the Philippines; A List of the Species in the Kew Herbarium. This Journal 2 (1907) Botany 77-110. . ? Cyperaceae-Caricoideae, in A. Bauer ‘Das Phiniilesche Heft 38 (1909). 57 58 KUKENTHAL. 1. UNCINIA Pers. Species unica: * 1. Uncinia rupestris Raoul var. capillacea Kiikenth. in Engl. Pflanzenreich 38 (1909) 64. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Mount Pulog, For. Bur. 16140 Curran, Merritt, & Zschokke. MINDANAO, District of Davao, Todaya, Mount Apo, Hlmer 10637. Zum ersten Male ist damit de dem australischen Florenreiche eigentumliche Gattung Uncinia auf den Philippinen nachgewiesen. Die typische Form von Uncinia rupestris bewohnt Tasmanien und die Siidinsel von Neuseeland, die var. capillacea die letztere und die Stewart Insel. 2. CAREX L. CLAVIS SUBGENERUM. 1. Spicula unica terminalis Subg. I. Primocareaz p. 58 1. Spiculae plures. > 2. Spiculae semper bisexuales (apice g basi @); cladoprophyllum (i. e. prophyllum axis 2 vel 3 ordinis) in spiculis omnibus utriculiforme. Subg. II. Inpocarex p. 58 2. Spiculae sexu distinctae vel bisexuales; cladoprophyllum (saltem in spiculis inferioribus semper) ocreaeforme .....-.2.-...00.-..- Subg. ITI. Evcarex p. 61 Subgenus I. Prawocarex Kiikenth. Species unica: 1. Carex rara Boott subsp. capillacea Boott Illustr. 1. (1858) 44; Kiikenth. 1. ¢. 102. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Loher 705 3 Pauai, Bur. Sci. 4260 Mearns, Bur. Sci. 8333 McGregor, Merrill 4732, 6626, 6632 ; Mount Pulog, Merrill 6612. Area: Siid- und Ostasien; Neu Siid Wales. Carex rara Boott und C. capillacea Boott sind nur in ihren extreme Formen deutlich von einander geschieden, zahlreiche Bindeglieder verwischen die Grenzen. Subgenus II. Inpocarex Baillon. Clavis specierum. 1. Inflorescentia spicata; bracteae deficiunt; spiculae omnes e cladoprophyllo simul nucem fertilem includente enatae. 2. O. nikkoensis 1. Inflorescentia paniculata; bracteae longe vaginantes adsunt; spiculae omnes e cladoprophyllo vacuo enatae. 2. Spiculae cylindricae 3 ad 6 em longae 2. Spiculae vix super 1.5 cm longae. 3. Spiculae numerosae ovatae vel oblongae in paniculas longas dispositae. 4. Paniculae partiales explicatae. 5. Squamae 9 in aristam longam excurvam excurrentes; utriculi ovati subinflato-trigoni abrupte rostrati ...:............. 4. 0. indica var. fissilis 5. Squamae 9 acutae interdum mucronatae; utriculi vere trigoni sub- sensim rostrati. ‘A 6. Paniculae laxae; squamae fuscae; utriculi lanceolato-elliptici in rostrum longum gracile marginibus parce scabrum excurrentes. ‘ 5. C. filicina var. ceylanica 6. Paniculae subdensae; squamae saturate ferrugineae ; utriculi elliptici marginibus infra medium ad apicem hispiduli in rostrum sublatum abeuntes 6. CO. Raffi dco ice -... 8. 0. baccans CYPERACEAE-CARICOIDEAE. 59 4. Paniculae partiales contractae 7. OC. pyenothyrsos 3. Spiculae pauciores globosae vel ovatae in spicas breves dispositae. 4. Bracteae inflorescentiam longe superantes; squamae longe aristatae; utriculi rhomboidales longe rostrati. 5. Spiculae divaricatae ovatae; utriculi glabri multicostati. 8. CO. fuirenoides var. cirrhulosa 5. Spiculae oblique patentes globoso-ovatae; utriculi pubescentés tenuiter nervosi 9. C. nodiflora 4. Bracteae breves; squamae mucronatae; utriculi ovales breviter rostrati. 10. C. rhizomatosa *2. Carex nikkoénsis Franch. & Sav. Enum. Pl. Japon. 2 (1879) 132, 558; Kiikenth. 1. ¢. 252. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Pauai, Merrill 6631. Bisher nur aus Japan bekannt. — 3. Carex baccans Nees in Wight Contrib. (1834) 122; Kiikenth. 1. ¢. 258. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, ohne nihere Standortangabe, Loher 706, 1948: Mount Tonglon (Santo Tomas), Bur. Sci. 5350, 5457 Ramos, Mearns s. n., Elmer 6270; Baguio, Williams 1973, For. Bur. 15602 Ourran; Batan, Bur. Sci. 5908 Ramos; Pauai to Baguio, Merrill 4794; Mount Pulog, Merrill 6543, Bur. Sci. 8442, 8889 McGregor, For. Bur. 16139 Curran, Merritt, & Zschokke: Lepanto Subprovince, Mount Data, Merrill 4515, 4555. Area: Vorderindien und Monsungebiet. *4. Carex indica L. var. fissilis (Boott) Kiikenth. 1. e. 264. PaLawan, Iwahig, Bur. Sci. 844 Foaworthy. Area: Monsungebiet und Polynesien. 5. Carex filicina Nees var, ceylanica (Boeck.) Kiikenth. C. ceylanica Boeck. in Linnaea 11 (1876) 341; Kiikenth. 1. ¢. 279. Luzon, ohne Standortangabe, Loher 707 B: Abra Subprovince, Bur. Sci. 7213 Ramos: Province of Laguna,.-Mount Banajao, Bur. Sci. 6582 Robinson, Bur. Sci. 2404 Foaworthy: Benguet Subprovince, Mount Pulog, For. Bur. 16136 Ourran, Merritt, & Zschokke. NeEGros, Canlaon Voleano, Phil. Pl. 544 Merrill. Area: Ceylon. Ich habe mich davon iiberzeugt, dass C. ceylanica Boeck. als eigene Art nicht zu halten ist, sie gehért augenscheinlich in den Formenkreis von 0. filicina, von welcher sie durch “paniculae partiales oblongo-ovatae laxiores, ramuli oblique patentes, utriculi superne parce scabri” abweicht. ‘ Forma 1, saturata (C. B. Clarke) Kiikenth. 1. ¢. 275 (pro var. C. filicinae). Luzon, Province of Tayabas, Mount Banajao, For. Bur, 866 Klemme, Whit- ford 949. Nearos, Canlaon Voleano, Phil. Pl. 545 Merrill, Area: Sumatra, Java. — Forma 2, depauperata Kiikenth. 1. ¢. 275. © Luzon, Lepanto Subprovince, Mount Data, Merrill 4513; Benguet Subprovince, Pauai, Merrill 4743; Mount Pulog, Bur. Sci. 88387 McGregor, Merrill 6499, 6507, 6615, For. Bur. 16138 Curran, Merritt, € Zschokke; Mount Tonglon, Mearns s. n. Mrinporo, Mount Haleon, Merrill 6200. Area: Java. 6. Carex Rafflesiana Boott in eet Linn. Soc. 20 (1846) 182; Ktikenth. lie. 282. Carex continua C. B. Clarke in Philip. Journ. Sci. 2 (1907) Bot. 107, partim. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, ohne Standortangabe, Bur, Sci. 2739 Mearns; 60 KUKENTHAL. . Baguio, Elmer 6039; Pauai, Merrill 4742, Bur. Sci. 8378 McGregor, Bur. Sci. 4259 Mearns ; Bugias, Merrill 4669: Province of Pampanga, Mount Arayat, Merrill 4221: Province of Laguna, Mount Banajao, Bur. Sci. 6076 Robinson: Province of Bataan, Mount Mariveles, Whitford 1121. PatawaNn, Mount Victoria, Bur. Sci. 665, 679 Foxworthy; Mount Pulgar, Bur, Sci. 554 Foxworthy, For. Bur. 3890 Curran. Area: Sumatra, Java, Celebes, Queensland. Var. scaberrima (Boeck.) Kiikenth. 1. ¢. 283. Carex scaberrima C. B, Clarke in Philip. Journ. Sci. 2 (1907) Bot. 107. BaTANES ISLANDS, Batan, Mount Ivraya, Bur. Sci. 3801 Féniz. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Pauai to Baguio, Merrill 4795; Pauai, Bur. Sci. 4258, 4481 Mearns ; Baguio, For. Bur. 4868 Curran; Mount Pulog, For. Bur. 16161 Curran, Merritt, «& Zschokke: Province of Albay, Cuming 936; Mount Mayon, Bur. Sci. 2920, - 2932, 2934, 2936 Mearns: Province of Zambales, Mount Pinatubo, Bur. Sci. 2539 Foxworthy; Mount Tapulao, For. Bur. 8137 Curran & Merritt: Province of La- guna, Mount Maquiling, Bur. Sci. 9736 Robinson. MINDANAO, Province of Misa- mis, Mount Malindang, For. Bur. 4764 Mearns & Hutchinson. Area: Sumatra, Java, Celebes, Molukken. x Var. continua (C. B. Clarke) Kiikenth. : Carex continua C. B. Clarke in Philip. Journ. Sci. 2 (1907) Bot. 107, partim et verisimiliter etiam in Hook. f. Fl. Brit. Ind. 6 (1894) 717; Kiikenth, 1. ¢. 281. Inflorescentia depaniculata multo laxior. Paniculae secundariae in ambitu latiores, rami saepe divaricati. Utriculi in faciebus glabrescentes minores brevius rostrati. eo) ’ Luzon, ohne Standortangabe, Loher 707, 708, 709, 710: Province of Bataan, Mount Mariveles, Whitford 189, 1145, Bur. Sci. 1593 Foxworthy, Merrill 3197, Elmer 6985: Province of Nueva Vizcaya, Bur. Sci. 8221 Ramos: Benguet Sub- province, Baguio, Williams 1241. Mrnnoro, Mount Haleon, For. Bur. 4384 M erritt. Area: Vorderindien, Oberburma, Centralchina. ‘ Auch Carex continua C, B. Clarke muss ich nach dem mir jetzt vorliegenden reichlicheren Material als Art einziehen. Soweit die Philippinenpflanzen in Betracht kommen, verteilt sich Clarke’s C. continua auf die typische C. Raffle- siana und auf die hier beschriebene Varietiit. : 7. Carex pycnothyrsos Kiikenth. sp. nov. Rhizoma abbreviatum lignosum. Culmus 80 em altus firmus triqueter laevis. Folia culmo breviora 4-6 mm lata plana supra aspera rigida, vaginae fuscae. Inflorescentia subdepaniculata 22 cm longa. Paniculae partiales 7 mediae binae caeterae singulae in ambitu oblongae contractae superiores spiciformes approximatae sessiles sequentes remotae exserte pedunculatae erectae; pedunculi graciles sed stricti scabridi. Rhachis dense hispida; ramuli erecti inferiores pauci- superiores monostachyi. Bracteae foliaceae inflorescentiam superantes vaginantes. Spiculae ob- longo-ovatae 6-7 mm longae androgynde (pars ¢ fere abscondita) densiflorae bracteolis squamiformibus aristatis suffultae. Squamae 9? ovatae fuscae e carina flava in aristam brevem excurrentes. Utriculi® squamas plus duplo superantes oblique patentes lanceolato-elliptici trigoni + mm longi pallide virides fusco-tincti plurinervosi glabri vel superne parce scabri basi contracti marginibus e medio ad apicem hispiduli in CYPERACEAE-CARICOIDEAE. 61 rostrum longum latiusculum grosse bidentatum sensim desinentes. Nux oblongo-elliptica. Stylus in collo insidens. Stigmata 3. Neeros, Canlaon Voleano, altitude 1,200 m, Phil. Pl. 543 Merrill, April, 1910. Diese schéne Art hat habituell grosse Ahnlichkeit mit Carex Lindleyana Nees. Die dichtgewimperten Riinder der Schliiuehe und deren breitere Schniibel erweisen aber ihre niihere Beziehung zu der Gruppe Hispidulae. 8. Carex fuirenoides Gaudich. var. cirrhulosa (Nees) Kiikenth. |. ¢. 287. Carex fibrata Boott apud Vid. Phan. Cuming. Philip. (1885) 156. Luzon, Province of Nueva Vizcaya, Quiangan, Merrill 109. CrBu, Cuming L764. Die typische Form auf den Mariannen-Inseln. 9. Carex nodiflora Boeck. in Engler’s Bot. Jahrb. 5 (1884) 516; Kiikenth. 1. e. 288. Carex Oumingii Vid. Phan. Cuming. Philip. (1885) 156; C. B. Clarke in Philip. Journ. Sei. 2 (1907) Bot. 107. Luzon, Wichura, Loher 704, 712: Province of Isabela, Bur. Sci. 8006 Ramos: Province of Nueva Ecija, Cuming 1408: Province of Laguna, Los Bafios, Alberto s. n., Hlnier 8304: Province of Benguet, Twin Peaks, Elmer 6449: Province of Rizal, Antipolo, Bur. Ros. 3350 Ramos. Endemisch. 10. Carex rhizomatosa Steud. in Zoll. Verz. Ind. Archip. (1854) 60; Kiikenth. l. c. 289. Carea Cumingiana Steud. Syn. Cyp. (1855) 206. Luzon, Bontoe Subprovince, Bauco, Vanoverbergh 323: Province of Rizal, Bur. Sci. 2700 Ramos. Necros, Cuming 1795. Mrixpanao, Lake Lanao, Camp Keith- — ley, Mrs. Clemens 1096. Area: Assam, Oberburma, Tonkin, Molukken. Subgenus Eucarex Coss. et Germ, Clavis specierum. 1. Utriculi erostrati vel brevirostres, rostrum ore truncatum vel emarginatum raro leviter bidentatum. \ 2. Squamae Q fuscae; stigmata 2. 3. Spiculae 4 ad 6, terminales ¢, laterales Q (apice ana breviter g ); utriculi dense glandulosi enervii breviter rostrati-.............. ll. C. phacota 3. Spiculae 12 ad 20, androgynae; utriculi snk genre multicostati erostrati 12. C. Graeffeana 2. Squamae Q sordide luteae; stigmata 3. . 3. Bractea ima breviter vaginans; spiculae .oblongae vel oblongo-ovatae sub- densiflorae 13. €. breviculmis subsp. Royleana 3. Bractea ima longe vaginans; spiculae 2 anguste eylindricae sublaxiflorae. 4. Spiculae omnes androgynae 14. C. eryptostachys 4, Spiculae sexu distinctae. 5. Utrieuli elliptici; filamenta dilatata basi connata...... 15. C. tristachya ; var. pocilliformis ' 5. Utriculi lageniformes; filamenta libera. 6. Culmus centralis 5 ad 6 em altus; folia 2 mm lata; syhewlae 9.1.5 ‘ em longae 16. CO. rhynchachaenium 6. _Culmus lateralis ; folia ad 8 mm lata; spiculae 9 4 em longae ' 17. C. ligata var. nexa 62 KUKENTHAL. 1. Utriculi longius rostrati, rostrum ore bidentatum. 2. Stigmata 2 18. C.brunnea 2. Stigmata 3. 3. Inflorescentia paniculata; squamae 9 fuscae. 4. Utriculi anguste lanceolati 5 ad 6 mm longi... 19. C. turrita 4. Utriculi elliptici 3 mm longi 20. O. Merrillit 3. Inflorescentia spicata; squamae Q rufae vel pallidiores. 4. Rhizoma stoloniferum; spiculae @ densi- et multiflorae; utriculi inflato- is 4a) Tame Eth SRE, HST AGO A IRR ae ae SE 21. CO. subtransversa 4. Rhizoma caespitosum; spiculae 2 oblongae vel ovatae, pauciflorae. 5. Spiculae omnes androgynae, densiflorae; utriculi rhomboidales 7 mm longi multinervosi marginibus anguste alati............... 22. O. Ramosii 5. Spiculae terminales ¢, laterales 9 vel apice breviter 4, laxiflorae; utriculi ellipsoidei trigoni. 6. Culmus centralis; spiculae superiores subradicales, foemineae ovatae; bracteae breves 23. O. Loheri 6. Culmus lateralis; spiculae apice fastigiatae, foemineae oblongae; bracteae inflorescentiam longe superantes ................ 24, O. Elmeri “11. Carex phacota Spreng. Syst. 3 (1826) 826; Kiikenth. 1. e. 350, Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Baguio, Bur. Sci. 2505 Mearns, Williams 1246. Area: Vorderindien, Hinterindien, Siidjapan, Java. 12. Carex Graeffeana Boeck. in Flora 58 (1875) 22; Kiikenth. 1. e. 403. Luzon, Bontoe Subprovince, Bauco, Vanoverbergh 441: Benguet Subprovince, Pauai, Merrill 6622, Bur. Sci. 8370 McGregor j Baguio, Elmer 8582 ; Mount Pulog, For. Bur. 16132 Ourran, Merritt, & Zschokke; ohne Standortangabe, Loher 699: Province of Nueva Vizcaya, Bur. Sci. 8174, 8177 Ramos. Mrnpanao, District of Davao, Mount Apo, Copeland 1250. Area: Fidschi Inseln. * 13, Carex breviculmis R. Br. subsp. Royleana Nees ex Wight Contr. (1834) 127; Kiikenth. 1. ¢. 469. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Mount Pulog, Merrill 6609, Bur. Sci. 8858 McGregor. : Area: Vorderindien, Hinterindien, Tonkin, Formosa, China, Korea, Amurgebiet, Japan. Var. kingiana (Léviellé et Vaniot) Kiikenth. 1. ¢. 470. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Pauai, Merrill 6628. Area: Japan. *14, Carex cryptostachys Brongn. in Duperrey Voy. Coquille Bot. (1828) 152; Kiikenth. 1. ¢. 471, 4 Luzon, Province of Rizal, Bur. Sci. 1760 Ramos: Province of Laguna, Mount Banajao, Bur. Sci. 9758 Robinson: Province of, Sorsogon, Elmer 7306. Area: Malacca, Java, Tonkin, Formosa. * 15. Carex tristachya Thunb. var. pocilliformis (Boott) Kiikenth. 1. c. 473. Luzon, Province of Benguet, Pauai, Merrill 6629, 6630; Mount Pulog, Merrill 6606, Bur. Sci. 8856 McGregor. . Area: Formosa, Korea, Japan. ) 16. Carex rhynchachaenium C. B. Clarke ex Merrill in Govt. Lab. Publ. (Philip.) 35 (1905) 5; Kiikenth. 1. c. 480. Luzon, Province of Bataan, Mount Mariveles, Hlmer 6983: Province of Pam- panga, Mount Arayat, Phil. Pl. 512 Merrill. CY PERACEAE-CARICOIDEAE. 63 Proxima C. breviscapae C. B. Clarke, differt culmo minore, foliis angustioribus spiculis paucioribus brevioribus, utriculis longioribus pubescentibus. A Q. ligata Boott differt culmo centrali, foliis bracteisque culmum longe superantibus. Endemisch. * 17. Carex ligata Boott var. nexa (Boott) Kiikenth. 1. c. 474. Luzon, Bontoe Subprovince, Bauco, in forests 1,600 m. alt., Vanoverbergh 496. Area: Hongkong, Centralchina. 18. Carex brunnea Thunb. Fl. Jap. (1784) 38; Kiikenth. 1. c. 599. Luzon, ohne Standortangabe, Loher 711: Province of Benguet, Mount Tonglon, Merrill 4819: Province of Zambales, Mount Tapulao, For. Bur. 8152 Curran & Merritt: Province of Pampanga, Mount Arayat, Merrill 4223, 4224: Province of Bataan, Mount Mariveles, Merrill 3196, 3880, Whitford 1346, Bur. Sci. 1592 Foxworthy: Lepanto Subprovince, Mount Data, Merrill 4529, 4514. Area: Mascarenen, Vorderindien, Hinterindien, Tonkin, China, Korea, Japan, Celebes, Australien. Alle Exemplare von den Philippinen zeigen in Spelzen und Schliiuchen ein helleres zimmtbraun als die typische oo und gehen in die folgende Varietiit tiber. Var. subteiogyna Kiikenth. in Fedde Repert. 8 (1910) 8. Spiculae laxiores. Squamae dilutiores longiores acuminatae. Utriculi 5 mm longi longius stipitati glaberrimi vel perparce scabri perlonge rostrati. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Mount Pulog, Merrill 6505, Bur. Sci. 8866 Me- Gregor ; Pauai, Merrill 4731. Neraros, Canlaon Volcano, Merrill 6974. 19. Carex turrita C. B. Clarke in Journ. Linn. Soc. 37 (1904) 13. Carex Walkeri Arn. var. turrita Kiikenth. 1. ¢. 564. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Loher 700: Abra Subprovince, Bur. Sci. 7288 Ramos. Endemisch. Macht mir jetzt nach Einsicht vollstiindigerer Raney doch den Eindruck einer eigenen Art, *20. Carex Merrillii Kiikenth. in Fedde Repert. 8 (1910) 7. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Pauai, Merrill 6623. Aus der Verwandtschaft der vorigen Art, 0. Daltoni — und C. inaequalis Boott. Endemisch. 21. Carex subtransversa C. B. Clarke in Philip. Journ. Sci. 2 On) Bot. 108; Kiikenth. 1. ¢. 614. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Pauai, Merrill 4780. Area: Formosa (Kawakami & Mori 2298, 2385). Am niichsten mit Carex japonica Thunb. und ©. mollicula Boott verwandt, von beiden durch die schiefabstehenden nicht runzeligen plétzlich in den Schnabel zusam Schliiuche getrennt. on .—) o * 22. Carex Ramosii Kiikenth. in Fedde Repert. 8 (1910) 8. Luzon, Province of Rizal, Morong, Bur. Sci. 1434 Ramos; Antipolo, Phil. Pl. 536 Ramos. Endemisch. 64 KUKENTHAL. 23. Carex Loheri C. B. Clarke in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. 37 (1904) 14; Kiikenth. 1. ¢. 487. Luzon, Lepanto Subprovince, Mount Data, Merrill 4488 ; Benguet Subprovince ohne niiheren Standort, Loher 701, 702, 708, 708bis; Mount Pulog, Merrill 6605, 6607, 6506 ; Baguio, Elmer 8582: Province of Zambales, Mount Tapulao, Bur. Sci. 5133 Ramos: Province of Laguna, Mount Banajao, Bur Sci. 9838 Robinson, Bur. Sci. 2403 Foxworthy. Forma grandimascula Kiikenth. forma nova. Spicula ¢ lineari-ellipsoidea 1.5 em longa longe pedunculata. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Pauai, Merrill 4729. Endemisch. ear * 24. Carex Elmeri Kiikenth. in Fedde Repert. 8 (1910) 326. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Baguio, Elmer 8444. Necros, Canlaon Voleano, Merrill 6972. Nahe mit C. Loheri verwandt, aber durch zentrale Blattrosette, breitere am Rande nicht weissschiilferige Blitter, an der Spitze gedriingt stehende Ahrchen und lange Bracteen geschieden. Endemisch. Order No, 415. IN PRESS. PHILIPPINE HAT MAKING. By C. B. Rosryson. (Reprinted from Section C. Philippine Journal of Science, Vol. VI, No. 2.) Price $0.80 United States currency, postpaid. The work covers the whole field of the subject, the origin and history of hat making so far as the Philippines are concerned, the materials used, methods of preparation, the actual hats and the dif- ference between them, their prices, statistics of the export trade in them, brief comparisons with the products of other countries in- the eastern tropics, and. the commercial situation and outlook. It embodies also short notes on mat making and other allied industries. The headings are as follows: Introduction, seat of industry, history, species of plants used, means of distinguishing the principal kinds of Philippine hats, bamboo hats, buri hats, buri-leaf hats, buntal hats, and buri-midrib or Calasiao hats, pandan hats including sabotan, ba- langot hats, hemp hats, ‘nito hats, ticog or tayoctayoc hats, materials of minor importance, straw hats, salacots, mat making, cigar-cases and cigarette-cases, bags and baskets, general considerations and acknowl- edgments. : This is an extensive, well-illustrated article, the result of much re- search work, extending over a period of many months. For those inter- ested in hat manufacturing the work will be found authoritative and valuable. = NOTE.—Orders should be sent to the Business Manager, Philippine Journal of Science, Manila, or to any of the below-listed agents. Please give Order Number. FOREIGN AGENTS. The Macmillan Company, 64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York City, U. S. A. Messrs. Wm. Wesley. & Son, 28 Essex Street, Strand, London, W. C., England. Mr. Martinus Nijhoff, Nobelstraat 18, The Hague, Holland. Messrs. Mayer & Miiller, Prinz Louis Ferdinandstrasse 2, Berlin, N. W., Germany. Messrs. Kelley & Walsh, Limited, 32 Raffles Place, e, Straits Sett Messrs, A. M. & J. Ferguson, 19 Baillie Street, Colombo, Ceylon. CIRCULARS AND DESCRIPTIVE MATTER SENT ON APPLICATION. 100004——5 Order No. 412. THE SUGAR INDUSTRY IN THE ISLAND os OF NEGROS. By Herpert 8. WaLKer. 145 pages, 10 photographie plates, and 1 map. : Price $1.25 United States currency, postpaid. ABSTRACT OF CONTENTS. Introduction; general and geographical information regarding Negros __.... Mountains, rivers, and climate g ll The sugar-producing districts of Negros .... z 14 History of sugar production in Negros; varieties of cane grown in Negros; cane diseases and insect enemies; nationality of the planters; native labor; difficulties, past and present 16 The soil of Negros sige wetio with that of other sugar-producing countries.. 68 Average composition of the purple or native sugar cane in Negros; other varieties of cane grown in Negros; cane in the Hawaiian Islands ; Egyptian cane; Java cane; Louisiana cane; West Indian cane; Negros as compared with other countries in respect to the quality of cane; desirability of introducing other varieties of cane : The cultivation of sugar cane and the production of sugar as carried on at the present time in Negros; preparation of the soil; preparation of the seed; planting; cultural operations after planting; cultivation of ratoon canes; period of growth of the cane; cost of cultivation; cutting the cane; transporting the cane to the mill 3 cost of cutting the cane and transporting it to the mill 82 Manufacture of sugar from the cane; extraction of the juice; manufacture of sugar from the juice; quality of the sugar produced in Negros; cost of manufacture; transportation and sale of the sugar; estimate of aver- age cost of same : 92 Quantitative experiments to determine the weight of sugar produced from given weight of cane 114 a a Calculation of the average cost of producing sugar in Negros by the methods now employed; cost for labor alone; estimate of fixed charges for main- tenance and depreciation of plant and interest on the capital invested ; total cost of production .... ati dO Possibilities for improvement; in cultivation; in manufacture; advantages of a change to modern methods of manufacture; the future of Negros ; summary; appendix; an investigation to discover if diseases of the Suewe cane exist in: Négros ip oo ase 126 Index. 2:53 143 NOTE.— Orders should be sent to the Business Manager, Philippine Journal of Science, Manila, or to any of the below-listed agents. 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VI JUNE, 1911 No. THE PHILIPPINE JOURNAL OF SCIENCE EDITED BY PAUL C. FREER, M. D., Pu. D. WITH THE COOPERATION OF E. D. MERRILL, M. S.; F. W. FOXWORTHY, Pu. D. C. B. ROBINSON, Pu. D.; H. N. WHITFORD, Pu. D. PUBLISHED BY THE BUREAU OF SCIENCE OF THE | GOVERNMENT OF THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS C. BOTANY, as. MANILA BUREAU OF PRINTING A 1911 Order No, 405, _ STUDIES scl MORO HISTORY, LAW, AND RELIGION. ne By Naszes M. Sauersy. mee 107 pages. 16 illustrations. 5 diagrams. A treatise on the history and customs of the Moro People. Price $0.25, United States currency, postpaid. Order No. 406. THE HISTORY OF SULv. es Naren M. SALEEBY. . matin Belay: othe Poop fa a Sulu, with maps s and | many * translations from. the eee documents, ae THE PHILIPPINE JOURNAL OF SCIENCE C. BOTANY Vor. VI JUNE, 1911 No. 2 PAPUAN FERNS COLLEGTED BY THE REVEREND COPLAND KING. - By Epwin BINGHAM COPELAND. (From the College of Agriculture, Los Banos, P. 1.) At various times during the past three years, I have received from the — Reverend Copland King, of Ambasi, Papua, very interesting collections _ of ferns from different places in eastern New Guinea. Part or all of these collections were first sent to Mr. F. Manson Bailey, who has published — some notes on them, but has not described any of the numerous novelties. As I was at first requested by Mr. King to await any work Mr. Bailey might wish to do with them, I have let these collections accumulate, without hitherto publishing anything on them. In consideration of the very limited knowledge concerning the flora of this region, it seems advisable now to list the entire collection, inserting the novelties in their natural places, The strongest impression gained by the study of these ferns is one of surprise at their completely Malayan character. This is so striking that it would have been almost as easy to believe that the whole collection had been made in Celebes, or even in Mindanao. This observation applies - equally to the species and to the larger groups. Of the determined species, and there is a residuum of hardly ten still to be identified, only three are known farther east or south and not in the Malay archipelago. On the other hand, there are twenty-two rr which find soe their 101823 66 COPELAND. most easterly known point, but have been collected in Malaya. Of all the extensive botanical evidence against the naturalness of Wallace’s line between Malaya and New Guinea, this is the most conclusive. As a matter of fact, the fern flora of all Polynesia is Malayan in general character, as evidenced by the fact that King’s collection contains eighty-seven species found both east and west of New Guinea. There are also sixteen species previously known in New Guinea only, and forty- two species described here as new. MARATTIACEA. MARATTIA Swartz. 1. Marattia Kingii Copel. species nova. Fronde teste King 1 m alta; pinnis 20-25 cm longis, rhachi deorsum albicante et sparse paleacea, sursum alata ; pinnulis sessilibus, late cuneatis, acuminatis, majoribus ca. 35 mm longis, 9 mm latis, lanceolatis, acute serrulatis, rigide coriaceis, infra albidis et ad costam venasque minute paleaceis ; venis simplicibus ; soris medialibus, 1-1.5 mm longis, sporangiis utroque latere 4 vel 5, indusio lacero conspicuo, receptaculo elliptico. No. 214, Goodenough Bay, altitude 1,200 m. Distinguished from its apparently nearest relative, M. melanesica Kuhn, by much finer serration, veins standing at nearly a right angle, and the fine scaliness,, characters easily recognized even on small fragments. 2. Marattia grandifolia Copel. species nova. Rhachi pinnae glabra, angustissime alata ; pinnulis breviter (ca. 2mm) stipitatis stipite subvelutino glabrescente, maximis ultra 20 cm longis, ultra 3 cm latis, basi inaequale cuneato-rotundata, acuminatis, acute leviter serratis, herbaceo-coriaceis, glabris, infra pallidis; venis simpli- cibus haud pellucidis; soris submarginalibus, ca. 2 mm longis, sporangiis utroque latere 9-12, indusio inconspicuo, scarioso, receptaculo oblongo- lineare. Species M. macrophyllae De Vr. affinis, qué pinnulis majoribus durioribus, venulis opacis distinguenda. No. 305. Of the numerous forms sometimes grouped under M. fraxinea, this is near only to the M. macrophylla named above. The leaflets of M. grandifolia are broadest below the middle. OPHIOGLOSSACEZE. OPHIOGLOSSUM Linnaeus. 1. O. reticulatum L. No, 232, Ambasi. Most tropical lands. PAPUAN FERNS. 67 HELMINTHOSTACHYS Kaulfuss. 1. H. zeylanica (L.) Hooker. No. 189, Ambasi. India to New Caledonia. SCHIZAEACEA. SCHIZAEA Smith. 1. S. dichotoma (L.) Smith. Nos. 137, 243, Ambasi. Polynesia to Madagascar. King states that this form, 8. Forsteri Spr., is readily distinguishable when growing, as the branches rise in a cluster, while in typical 8S. dichotoma, which he has found at Lakekamu, they spread or, even bend down. The man in the herbarium is never likely to know his ferns as the good collector does. 2. S. digitata (L.) Switz. No, 110, Waria River in German New Guinea, altitude 900 m. Fiji to India; and Madagascar (?). LYGODIUM Swartz. 1, L. circinnatum (Burm.) Swtz. Nos. 152, 236, Ambasi. Queensland to northern India. 2. L. trifurcatum: see under L. dimorphum. Melanesia, Celebes. 3. L. dimorphum Copel. species nova. Valde dimorphum ; ramis nanis fere obsoletis; frondulae sterilis stipi- tula 1-1.5 cm longa, frondulae fertilis longiore: frondula sterile furcata, ramo inferiore fere ad basin furcato, segmentis 15-20 cm longis, 15-20 mm latis, unilateraliter valde auriculatis, acuminatis, minute serrulatis, coriaceis, glabris, nitidis; frondula fertile furcata, ramis pinnatis vel rarius iterum furcatis, pinnis plerumque pinnatis interdum digitatis, pinnulis simplicibus vel furcatis rarius iterum furcatis, lamina sterile nulla; spicis 2-3 mm longis, sporis tuberculatis. No. 134, in part, 147, 63 and 344, all from Ambasi. ue This plant is a near relative of L. trifurcatum Baker, from which it is most - readily distinguished by the complete suppression of the sterile lamina on the fertile leaflets. I believe the first specimen sent me to be mixed with L. trifur- catum, although I can not identify the latter with the plant or plants distributed under that name, collected in German New Guinea by Hahn. The group seems to me to contain several species; but the ease of collecting mixtures in this genus makes especially careful field work a prerequisite to reliable determination of any incomplete specimens. The type specimen of L. dimorphum, in my herbarium, has sterile and fertile leaflets on the one rachis. King states that this fern is very common, but I do not know to which of the forms sent this applies. 68 COPELAND. No. 364 is one of the curious intermediates often found in Lygodium, the segments or pinnules being partly fertile. The change is rather abrupt, the fertile part promptly losing all the lamina. These pinnules. have the plan of ordinary sterile ones. 4. Lygodium Kingii Copel. species nova. '. Species L. scandenti Switz. affinis; rachidibus ubique minute pubes- centibus ; ramo nano subnullo; pinnulis ad pedicellarum capita conspicue incrassata articulatis, late cuneatis vel truncatis, haud cordatis, lanceo- latis, 4-6 cm longis; sporis tuberculatis. No. 362, from Mamba river; Nos. 282, 178. King sends this as the “inland variety” of L. scandens, but says “L. scandens along side this, and the contrast is marked.” The two species are very distinct, L. scandens having naked axes, the dwarf branch slender and 3 mm more or less in length, the thickening of the head of the pedicel evident after, but not before, the fall of the pinnule, and the spores white, and reticulate, rather than tuber- culate in appearance. My specimen, ticketed “L. microphyllum Sw.’’, collected by Hahn at Yabim, German New Guinea, is a mixture of sterile L. scandens and fertile L. flecuosum. 6k scandens Sw. No. 133, Ambasi. Africa to Polynesia. 6. L. japonicum Sw. No. 146, Ambasi. Australia to India and Japan. A sterile specimen collected at Mamba may be a hybrid of L. japonicum and L. circinnatum, but might be a monstrous D. dimorphum, the sterile pinna taking the plan of the fertile. : ‘ 7. L. Versteegii Christ in Rés. de l’Exp. Sei. Néerl. A la Nouv. Guinée 8 (1910) 163. ; Christ does not mention the auricled bases of the segments, which are con- spicuous though small on all of King’s specimens, but the plants are otherwise alike. One of King’s specimens, No. 360, is entirely sterile, and the segments are 40 cm long. The stalk of the pinna is suppressed; that of the segments is up to 1 em long, and usually provided with separate auricles, Nos. B. 46, from Gira; 360, from Lakekamu; and 361, from Mamba. The fertile frond of No. 361 has the veins free, while that of B. 46 has a row of areolae. GLEICHENIACEAE. GLEICHENIA Smith. 1. G. linearis (Burm.) Clarke. _ No. 158, Ambasi. Pantropic. 2. G. hirta Bl. No. 188, Goodenough Bay, altitude 1,200 m. Moluceas, Java, the Philippines. This plant is coriaceous, but otherwise typical. PAPUAN FERNS. 69 CYATHEACEAE. DICKSONIA L/’Heritier. l. D. papuana F. v. M., det. by Maiden. No. 230, Ambasi; No. 350, Lakekamu. This fern is reduced by all recent authors to Saccoloma sorbifolium (Sm.) Christ. I doubt the identity of these two; but be that as it may, the fern ‘is a Dicksonia rather than a Saccoloma. If one does not like to call it Dicksonia, it is probably Cystodium J. Sm. The mass of scales on and about the bases of the stipes is altogether Dicksonia-like. I have examined numerous sporangia from both of King’s collections and find that a majority have a somewhat oblique annulus interrupted by the pedicel. A smaller number have the annulus uninterrupted. The stomium is like that of other Dicksoniae. CYATHEA Smith. 1, C. fusca Baker. Nos. 181, 246, 277. New Guinea. The veins and costae are not glabrous. I know this fern only by description. 2. C. contaminans (Wall.) Copel. No. 215, in open country. ‘ ‘Malaya, India. t : Nos, 227 and 356 are other species of which the specimens are insufficient for certain identification. No. 227 is very probably undescribed. HYMENOPHYLLACEAE. - HYMENOPHYLLUM Smith. l. H. ooides F. Muell. & Bak. (7?) No. 106, Goodenough Bay. New Guinea. This fern is so determined by F. Manson Bailey, and I presume that he is acquainted with the original plant. In that case the original description is peculiar in several respects, especially in calling the pee lanceolate; those of this plant are rather elliptic. No. 246 is another very slender plant more than 30 em high and less than 3 cm wide; it agrees better than No. 106 with the description of H. ooides. It is a relative of H. blumeanum Spr. 2. H. dilatatum (Forst.) Sw. No. 186, Goodenough Bay. Malaya to New Zealand. Identification not positive as the specimens are sterile. 3. H. Reinwardtii v. d. Bosch. No. 210, Goodenough Bay, altitude 1,200 m. Java, Sumatra. Smaller and much more crisped that the form figured by van den Bosch, but otherwise not different. 70 COPELAND. 4. H. laminatum Copel. spec. nova. Rhizomate repente pube purpurea vestito ; stipite 4 ad 5 cm alto sursum pubescente ; fronde ca. 15-cm alta, 2.5 ad 3.5 cm lata, lanceolata, rhachi anguste 2—4-alata; pinnis lanceolatis, acutis, inferioribus brevistipitatis, fere ad costam pinnatisectis ; segmentis oblanceolatis vel obovatis, apice incisis sparse serrulatis, tenuiter rigidis, rufis; venis venulisque late et usque ad marginem undulato-cristatis; soris secus rhachin ordinatis, basi cristatis, ore bifido, laciniis denticulatis. No, 341, Lakekamu. Nearest 7. fuscwm (Blume) y. d. Bosch, differing from this relative in the narrower pinnae, more prolonged lamellae, occasionally serrate margin and denti- culate lobes of the indusium. 5. H. (Leptocionium) ovatum Copel. spec. nova. Rhizomate filiforme glabrescente ; stipite 1.cm alto, rhachique sursum alata nigris, glabrescentibus; fronde ovata, 4 cm alta, 3 cm lata, obtusa : pinnis utroque latere ca. 9, proximis et interdum imbricatis, sessilibus, apice rotundatis, fere ad costam pinnatifidis 3; Segmentis 1—2-lobatis, proxi- mis; lobis ca. 0.8 mm latis, obtusis, sparse serratis, margine haud crispa, glabris, coriaceis, brunneis; indusio infra medium bifido, laciniis late ovatis, superne dentatis. No, B. $2, Gira. Clearly distinguished from all related Species by the broad, very compact, and decidedly coriaceous little fronds. 6. H. serrulatum (Pr.). C.:-Chr..:? No. B. 31, Gira, Yodda, ete. — New Guinea and the Philippines, The specimens are small and sterile, The rachis is winged throughout, but this may not be so on adults. TRICHOMANES Linnaeus. 1. T. trichophyllum Moore. No. 109, Goodenough Bay, altitude 900 m. Sterile, but probably this species. Wo. §. 12 has the fruit character of this species, which it probably represents, though the segments are narrowly linear rather than bristle-like. — Borneo, New Guinea, New Caledonia. 2. T. grande Copel. spec. nova. Rhizomate erecto, stipitibus confertis, alatis, 20 cm altis; fronde 20-35 em alta vel ultra, 10-15 cm lata, quadripinnatifida, rhachibus alatis, Sparse puberula; segmentis ultimis 0.5 mm latis, planis, obtusis; soris paratactis, indusio utroque latere subearinato, infundibuliforme, limbo dilatato et interdum subrevoluto. Philippines: Copeland 1739 (type), Cuming 162 in part, Copeland 2054, Mer- rill 6060, Elmer 8333, Bur. Sci, 10289, and many other collections, Papua, King 351, Lakekamu (2) 7 PAPUAN FERNS. 71 This was included with some other species in 7. anceps Hooker. T. millefolium Pres] was based on another plant, also included in Cuming 162, which is T. maximum Bl. This is more like 7. rigidum Swtz. which however is a much smaller plant, less divided, with shorter indusium, and is very doubtfully present in the Orient. ! The Papuan specimen has much broader pinnae than those of the Philippines; I have not made it a type because I have not the rhizome. 3. T. aphlebioides Christ. No. 193. New Guinea. No. 68 of Kirnbach’s collection, from “Nuselang u. d. Sattelberges Weg nach Schleo,” distributed as 7. bauerianum, is also this species. 7. bawerianum, judg- ing by our Norfolk Island specimens, is altogether distinct, both from this fern and from 7’. apiifolium Presl. 4, T. dentatum v. d. B. (2) No. 358, Lakekamu. Polynesia. I doubt the identity. of this specimen with the species named, but it is very near it. 5. T. latipinnum Copel. spec. nova. Rhizomate repente, 25 mm crasso, pilis purpureo-nigris acicularibus _ dense vestito; stipite 15-20 cm alto, rhachique atropurpureis, decidue pilosis deinde hispidis; fronde trigona, 15 cm alta, 10 cm lata, quadri- pinnatifida; pinnis et pinnulis deltoideo-lanceolatis, pinnulis primariis et secundariis acroscopicis maximis; pinnulis™ incisis, segmentis ultimis 0.1-0.2 mm latis, 0.5-1 mm longis, acutis, glabris, coriaceis; soris para- tactis, indusiis 1 mm longis, 0.6 mm latis, infra medium alatis, truncatis, receptaculo paullo extruso. No. 108, Waria River, German New Guinea, altitude 900 m. Easily distinguished from the preceding, and from T. rigidum in all forms known to me, by the very broad pinnae and pinnules. 6. T. cupressoides Desv. No. 107, Waria River, German New Guinea, altitude 900 m. Westward to Madagascar. This agrees fairly well with van den Bosch’s plate of T. obscurum BL, but all our Javan specimens supposed to be this species have bilabiate indusia. 7. T. pallidum BI. No. 185, Goodenough Bay. India to Polynesia. 8. T. densinervium Copel. spec. nova. Cephalomanes stipite valido vix 10 cm alto, fronde 18 cm alta, vix 4 cm lata, sursum sensim angustata, pinnis proximis valde imbricatis, infimis haud remotis, obliquis, apice rotundatis, ciliatis, yenis angulo acuto orientibus, proximis, crassis, furcatis et inferioribus acroscopicis iterum fureatis; soris partem superiorem frondis occupantibus, acroscopicis, ad pinnam quamquam usque ad 8, uniformibus, indusiis compresso-infun- fiV J COPELAND. dibuliformibus, truncatis, limbo paullo dilatato vel interdum recto, recep- taculo exserto. No. 150, Differs evidently from 7. javanicum Bl., T. atrovirens Kze., and 7. Zollingeri v. d. B, in the coarse veins, which stand at a much more acute angle to the costa. The frond is also conspicuously more compact and the pinnae more rounded. 9. T. (Cephalomanes) acrosorum Copel. spec. nova. Stipitibus confertissimis, 1-2 cm altis; fronde 6-10 em alta, 1.5-2 em lata, rhachi pilosa glabrescente ; pinnis 10-12 mm longis, basi cuneatis, apice rotundatis, dentatis et interdum partitis, venatione sublaxa 3 pinnis supremis fertilibus, 1-3-soratis, lamina carentibus, indusio 2.5-3 mm longo, infra limbum plus minus dilatatum vix 1 mm crasso ; receptaculo usque ad 7 mm exserto. No. 352, Lakekamu. The racemose or narrowly paniculate sori make this very distinct from any species hitherto known. 10. T. (Cephalomanes) Kingii Copel. spec. nova. Rhachi anguste alata, glabra; pinnis laceratis ; paniculo breve; indusio conico, vix 2 mm alto, 1 mm vel ultra lato, limbo haud dilatato; aliter praecedenti simile. No. (?) Lakekamu. I have only one frond of this plant, but it has such a combination of dis- tinctive characters that I do not believe it can vary into 7. acrosorum. 1l. T. humile Forst. No. 136, on the coast. New Zealand to Formosa. No, 340 is a related species, but the specimen is sterile. POLYPODIACEZ. DRYOPTERIS Adanson. The great body of the species of this genus fall into three groups, which are for the most part natural and easily recognized. As there are such perfect series . of intermediates that the majority of my contemporaries have no disposition to hold these as distinct genera, and as I do not regard them as natural in detail, that is, as absolutely homophyletic, I am not concerned as to the generic validity + of the names chosen for these groups. They are: : § 1. Lasrrara. Fronds decompound or veinlets forked. This is in my opinion the most primitive group. From it have been derived Tectaria and Polystichum, which in turn have their daughter-genera. ‘ § 2. Tuetyrrerts. Fronds as a rule deeply bipinnatifid with simple veinlets, having the aspect of the next section, but the veins free, § 3. NepHRoprum. Pinnae not so deeply cut as to prevent anastomosis of at least the basal veinlets. PAPUAN FERNS. 73 § LASTRAEA. 1. D. setigera (Bl.) O. Kuntze. No. 155. Polynesia to India. 2. D. Kingii Copel. spec. nova. Lastraea gregis D. syrmaticae, stipite fusco, 30 cm alto, deorsum paleis linearibus ultra 2 cm longis ornato, sursum rhachique fere glabris; fronde ca. 30 cm alta, 15 cm lata; pinnis inferioribus vix minoribus, maximis ca. 10 cm longis, 2-2.5 cm latis, subsessilibus, acuminatis, fere ad costam incisis sinu acuto; segmentis ca. 15 mm longis, 5 mm latis, faleatis, acutis, integris, coriaceis, fere glabris; venis utroque latere 5 vel 6, furcatis; soris medialibus, indusio inviso. No. 149, Tamata and coast. Characterized by the texture and the acute, entire segments, separate almost to the costa. ry § THELYPTERIS. 3. D. quadriaurita Christ. No, 220, opposite Samarai. Mindanao. 4. D. wariensis Copel. spec. nova. Fronde ca. 45 cm alta, 20 cm lata, rhachi minute puberula, fusca, pinna apicale aliis simile; pinnis infimis paullo brevioribus, maximis ultra 15 cm longis, 3.5 cm latis, brevistipitatis, acuminatis, fere ad costam pinnatifidis; segmentis 18 mm longis, 2-3 mm latis, infimis vix diminutis, plerisque fere rectis, integris, obtusis, herbaceis, ubique gla- . bris; venis utroque latere usque 20; soris medialibus, indusio carente, sporangiis nudis. No. 101, Waria River, in German New Guinea. This may be near D. tuberculata, but is not at all glandular. The base of the stipe is wanting. 5. D. basisora Copel. spec. nova. Parte superiore stipitis fusca, sulco pubescente, say glabra; fronde ultra 60 cm alta, ca. 35 em lata; rhachi pubescente; pinnis infimis re- motis, deflexis, paullo brevioribus, maximis medialibus, 22 cm longis, 2.5-3 em fata brevistipitatis, acuminatis, profunde pinnatifidis, lamina costale utroque 1-1.5 mm lata; segmentis infimis reductis, majoribus 16 mm longis, 3.5 mm latis integris, acutis, rectis vel subfalcatis, coriaceis, venis et sparsissime lamina infra pubescentibus; venulis utroque latere usque ad 23, simplicibus; soris costularibus, indusiis nudis, nigtis, per- sistentibus. No. 304. ° This species has very much the aspect of D. re from which it is dis- tinguished by the indusia. ‘ a COPELAND. 6. D. falcatipinnula Copel. spec. nova. Stipite pallide brunneo, 30 cm alto; fronde 25-30 em alta, 30 cm lata, rhachi sparse praecipue sursum pubescente, apud insertiones pinnarum adenophora, pinna apicale aliis subsimile sed latiore; pinnis ca. 7-paribus, oppositis, 12 em longis, 15 mm latis, subsessilibus, valde acuminatis, infimis nec remotis nec diminutis, fere ad costam pinnatifidis; segmentis infimis brevioribus, majoribus 10-12 mm longis, linearibus, vix acutis, faleatis, integris, coriaceis, ad apices et in sinubus ciliatis, supra glabris, infra ad venas et venulas sparse pilosis; venis utroque latere ca. 12, simplicibus; soris inframedialibus, indusio brunneo, piloso, persistente. No. 114, in lowlands. Near D. loheriana, but less pubescent, and with narrower and more deeply cut pinnae. § NEPHRODIUM. 7. D. cucullata (Bl.) Christ. No. 163, common in grass land. Polynesia to the Seychelles. 8. D. arida (Don) O. Kuntze. ; ‘ No. 172, in grass land. Malaya, India. 9. D. paraphysata Copel. spec. nova. Fronde 75 cm alta, 30 cm lata; pinna apicale aliis simile, rhachi fusca, minute sordide pubescente; pinnis infimis utroque latere una (aut pluribus) in auriculam abrupte reductis; maximis 18 em longis, basi 2 cm latis, dein sensim ad apicem acuminatum attenuatis, rectis, brevi- pedicellatis, ca. $ ad costam pinnatifidis, costa dense, lamina sparis- sime setosis, segmentis truncatis, subcoriaceis ; yenis simplicibus, utroque latere ca. 7, quarum plerumque 2 anastomosantibus ; soris inframedialibus ; indusiis inconspieuis (non carentibus), paraphysibus multis, grande glan- duloso-capitatis ; sporangiis nudis; sporis spinis paucis longis ornatis. No. 306. : Near D. truncata (Presl) O. Kuntze; the latter is less hairy, has a conspicuous indusium, wants the copious paraphyses, and has the spores covered with short tubercles or spines. 10. D. arbuscula (Willd.) O. Kuntze, sensu lat. No. 171. Polynesia to India. D. arbuscula as generally construed contains several apparently distinct plants. 11, D. dichrotricha Copel. spec. nova. Stipite 40 cm alto, brunneo, ubique sparse villoso; fronde ultra 69 cm alta, 30-35 em lata, apice pinnatifida longa; rhachi pilis albidis PAPUAN FERNS. 75 minutis et aliis ultra 1 mm longis dense vestita; pinnis utroque latere ca. 20, infimis reductis, majoribus brevi-stipitatis, fere horizontalibus, ca. ' 2 cm latis, acuminatis, basi truncatis, $ ad costam pinnatifidis ; segmentis rotundatis, subfalcatis, integris, ubique minute pilosis et glandulosis; 2 vel 3 venis anastomosantibus; soris medialibus; indusiis persistentibus, pallidis, setosis, margine glandulifera; sporangis ad annulos nudis, alibi. interdum sparse setosis; sporis reticulatis. No. 294 (type) ; No. 219, mainland opposite Samarai. Near D. adenophora C. Chr., but the glandular spot inconspicuous and surfaces hairy; and to D. polycarpa Christ, but the attachment of the indusium short and the pubescence different; different from most of the D. parasitica group, in the glandular indusia. At the base of the frond are one pair of auricles and: one or two pairs of less reduced pinnae. 12. D. (Mesochlaena) polycarpa Christ. No. 159. Malaya, Polynesia. I have sometime favored the recognition of Mesochlaena as a genus, but do not now incline that way. It is too difficult to distinguish this plant from D. adenophora C. Chr. 13. D. aquatilis Copel. spec. nova. Stipite vix 15 em alto, fusco, basi nigro, sub lente minute appresso- setoso ; fronde ca. 35 em alta, 10 cm lata, apice 5 cm longo inciso-serrato, rhachi minute appresso-setosa; pinnis remotis, utroque latere ca. 14, stipitatis, ca. 6 cm longis, 7 mm latis, valde acuminatis, basi inaequilate- raliter cuneatis, acroscopice auriculatis, leviter serratis, membranaceis, costis et sparsissime venis setosis, lamina glabra, membranacea ; venulis utroque latere 2 vel 3, sat irregulariter anastomosantibus ; soris infimis op- positis proximis vel contiguis, superioribus medialibus ; indusio orbiculare, _ sinu manifeste vel saepius occulto. No. 182, under flood level of creeks. _ : Perfectly intermediate between D. lineata (BI.) C. Chr. and D. salicifolia (Wall.) ©. Chr.; the latter sometimes has the pinnae slightly auriculate. D. salicifolia has at least sometimes a rudimentary indusium which seems to have been overlooked. 14. D. prolifera (Retz.) C. Chr. No. 128. Polynesia to Africa. 15. D. triphylla (Swtz.) C. Chr, No. 322, Mamba. Queensland to India. 16. D. urophylla (Wall.) C. Chr. No. 258, not typical. Polynesia to India. 76 COPELAND. TECTARIA Cavanilles. 1, T. ferruginea (Mett.) Copel. comb. nova. Phegopteris ferruginea Mett. Ann. Mus. Lugd.-Bat, 1 (1864) 224. No. 264. - New Guinea. I have sometime since published the opinion that Tectaria is derived from a Dryopteris of the group of D. dissecta; this species is so near that group that at first sight I did not suspect its being a Tectaria. It impresses me as easily the most primitive known representative of its genus. i malayensis (Christ) Copel. No. 359, Lakekamu. Western Malaya and the Philippines. 3. T. cesatiana (C. Chr.) Copel. comb. nova. Aspidium cesatianwm C. Chr. Index (1905) 68. No. 161, Ambasi; No. 348, Lakekamu. New Guinea. Originally described by Baker, as Aspidiwm beccarianum ; this specific name is not transferred because of the earlier Polypodium beccarianum Cesati, which must also be Tectaria. ; 4. T. Menyanthidis (Presl) Copel. Nos. 169, 180, Ambasi. New Guinea, Philippines, Solomon Ids. Distinguished from 7. crenata by the somewhat scattered sori. 5. T. decurrens (Presl) Copel. No. 251, Ambasi. Polynesia to India and China. 6. T. papuana Copel. spec. nova. Stipite ca. 45 cm alto, nigro, nitido; fronde deltoidea, pinnata, ca. 40 cm alta, 30 cm lata; pinnis infimis stipitatis, deltoideis, cordatis, subfaleatis, acutis; sequentibus utroque latere 1, rotundato-adnatis, late lanceolatis, 4 cm latis, 15 cm longis, subfalcatis 3 pinna apicale tripartita, segmento mediale ca, 20 cm longo, 5 cm lato ; pinnis subsinuatis, coriaceis, supra nisi ad costas glabris, infra minute puberulis olivaceis; venis ad marginem attingentibus, reticulatione venularum minuta 3 soris grand- ibus, praecipue inter venas biseriatis, supra conspicuis, indusiis peltatia, glandulosis, persistentibus. No. 160. * : Near 7. tripartita (Baker ut Nephrodium) but not identical unless the diagnosis of that species is particularly poor. I have a New Caledonia fern determined as Aspidium tripartitum which differs from T. papuana only in being thinner and more ample; the two are easily conspecific. But neither has the indusia sagenioid or glabrous, and there are minor differences. 7. T. irregularis (Presl) Copel. No. 175, Mamba; No, 259. Malaya, Fiji. PAPUAN FERNS. 77 8. T. leuzeana (Gaudich.) Copel. No, 257. Polynesia to Asia. HEMIGRAMMA Christ. H. grandifolia Copel. spec. nova. Fronde pinnata ca. 30 cm alta et lata, longe stipitata ; pinnis oppositis utroque latere 2 vel 3; pinnis sterilibus vel segmentis earum oblanceolatis, acuminatis; infimis 1 vel 2 furcatis, apicale trifida, frondis fertilis pinnis infimis usque ad 15 cm longis, 2 mm latis, simplicibus, sporangiis laminam obtegentibus. No. 328, Lakekamu. A very distinct species, the sterile frond preserving in large measure the form of Tectaria crenata, from which, or from near which I consider the genus to be descended. STENOSEMIA Pres]. 1. S. aurita (Sw.) Presl. No. 235. Malaya, Solomon Islands. LEPTOCHILUS Kaulfuss. 1. L. cuspidatus (Presl) C. Chr. No. 144, on the coast; No, 269 is a very young plant, probably of this species. Polynesia to the Seychelles. 2. L. heteroclitus (Presl) C. Chr. Nos. 265, 284. Melanesia to India. 3. L. axillaris (Cav.) Kaulfuss. No. 216, Ambasi. s Westward to southern India. LOMAGRAMMA J. Sm. 1. L. sp. perhaps L. lomarioides, which should be found in this region. No. 334, Sogere. There’ is no sterile frond. : : DIPTERI!S Reinwardt. 1. D. conjugata Reinw. No, 151, Ambasi. Polynesia to Asia. ATHYRIUM Roth. 1. A. esculentum (Retz.) Copel. : No. 254. A small frond, only the lowest veinlets anastomosing. Polynesia to India. 2. A. accedens (BI.) Milde. Nos. 179, 292. Polynesia to Africa. 78 COPELAND. 3. A. cordifolium (Bl.) Copel. No.- 245. Polynesia to Africa. 4. A. sorsogonense (Presl) Milde. No. 329, Lakekamu. Malaya to India; new to New Guinea. 5. A. cyatheifolium (Rich.) Milde. No, 331, Lakekamu. New Guinea to Luzon. 6. A. pallidum (BI.) Milde. No. 365, Mamba. Queensland, Malaya. 7. A. crenato-serratum (BI.) Milde. No. 344, Lakekamu. Malaya; new to New Guinea. BLECHNUM Linnaeus. B. orientale L. No. 157. Polynesia to India. Blechnum sp., near B. Moorei C. Chr. No. 104, Goodenough Bay, altitude 300-600 m. Very likely a new species, but near the above which is New-Caledonian. PHYLLITIS Ludwig. 1. P. (Triphlebia) longifolia (Pr) 0: 2K* No. 191. Malaya, Papua. 2. P. (Diplora) mambare (Bailey) v. A. v. R. (2) No. 287. This determination was given Mr. King in Sydney. The largest fronds are less than 10 em long and not serrate; the stipes of the larger ones bear free leaflets below the body of the frond. New Guinea. ASPLENIUM Linnaeus. 1. A. acrobryum Christ Rés. de VExp. Sci. Néerl. a la Nouv.-Guinée 8 (1910) 150. No. 120 A. Common on the coast. Described from Noord-rivier. This specimen is smaller than the type, being about 30 cm long and 4-5 em wide, with the prolonged tip shorter. The tips of the veins are free. 2. A. Phyllitidis Don. No. 286. Malaya, Philippines, India. * This is the fern commonly so called. PAPUAN FERNS. 79 3. A. papuanum Copel. spec. nova. Rhizomate repente, 1 mm crasso, viride, nigro-striato, paleis minutis sparsis; stipitibus 1 cm inter se distantibus, ca. 3 cm longis deorsum paleis minutis angustis vestitis; fronde ca. 15 cm alta, 25 mm lata, simplice, acumine obtuso producto, crenata, herbacea, infra albida, glabra ; venis obliquis, remotis, liberis; soris a costa fere ad marginem protensis ; indusio lato pallido. No. 287. ; This differs from most of the simple-leaved species in the very slender rhizome and herbaceous texture. It differs from A. comosum Christ of the same region in texture and size and in several details. A. concolor Hook., and A. amboinense Willd. have stout rhizomes and tufted stipes. The spores are finely reticulate, and sparingly and irregularly tuberculate, but not spiny; which distinguishes it from several species of the group. 4, A. tenerum Forst. var. acuminatum. No, 248. Polynesia to India. 5. A. Kingii Copel. spec. nova. Euasplenium, stipite alto, 4 mm crasso, sulcato, sursum glabro, griseo- nigro; fronde ultra 50 cm alta, pinnata; pinnis utroque latere 5, infimis stipitatis furcatis, aliis subsessilibus integris, ca. 20 em longis, ca. 5 cm latis, abrupte acuminatis, basin versus (furcatis exceptis) aequalibus, obscure crenatis, herbaceis, glabris; venis furcatis; soris ca. 2 cm longis, nec costam nec marginem attingentibus; indusio atro-brunneo, angusto. No. 357, Lakekamu; No. 300 is an immature specimen of the same, the basal pinnae not forked. The spores have a hyaline cover, and are not spiny. The species is apparently very distinct, and easily repognized by its large, broad, thin pinnae, even though the forking of the lowest is not constant. 6. A. pellucidum Lam. No. 226. Polynesia to Madagascar. 7. A. macrophyllum Sw. No. 169, common on coast. Polynesia to the Comores. No. 315, from Taupota, is a frond with narrow, almost entire pinnae, which may be a variety of this variable species. : 8. A. cuneatum Lam. No. 260. : Pantropic. 9. A. affine Swtz. Nos. 289, 279. Polynesia to the Comores. 80 COPELAND. 10. A. obtusatum Forst. No. 120. Australia to Chile. My specimen is insufficient for positive determination, but is accompanied by this name. The rachis is broadly winged. 11. A. Lauterbachii Christ. (A. obtusilobum Hook. non Desv., A. oceanicum Chr.) ‘ No. 222, Goodenough Bay, altitude 1200 m.; No. 354, Lakekamu. Polynesia to Celebes, No. 354 has on the same plants typical fronds of A. Lauterbachii and of A. oceanicum. This is an example of the not rare event that an author, believing he describes a new species, really gives the first valid name to one already long known. C. 12. A. scandens J. Sm. No. 342, Lakekamu. Fiji to Luzon. ‘ STENOCHLAENA J. Smith. 1. S. palustris (Burm.) Bedd. No. 167, Ambasi. : . Polynesia to the Asiatic continent, 2. S. Kingii Copel. Lomariopsis, caule 1 cm crasso, inerme, paleaceo ; stipite non articulato, 20 cm longo, paleaceo dein glabrescente; pinnis frondis sterilis multi- jugis, ca. 16 cm longis, 20-22 mm latis, brevissime stipitatis, articulatis, basi cuneatis, acuminatis, crenulatis, coriaceis, glabris, siccis supra atrovi- ridibus, infra olivaceis ; pinnis fertilibus 20 em longis, 2 mm latis, stipiti- bus earum 5 mm longis, validis. No. 285. © Nearest to L. recurvata Fée Mém, 2: pl. 28, but with longer and much stouter stalks of the fertile pinnae and without the peculiar episporium. Of species in the same part of the world, 8. Brackenridgii (Carr.) Underw. has sterile pinnae abruptly narrowed to long stalks, and 8. Novae-Caledoniae (Mett.) Underw. has broad fertile pinnae and sterile pinnae stalked and not acuminate. , ARTHROPTERIS J. Smith. 1. A. Kingii Copel. spec. nova. Rhizomate repente, 1 mm crasso, nigro, -paleis deciduis; stipitibus remotis, 3-5 cm altis, nigris, ca. 2 em supra rhizoma articulatis: fronde 12-20 em alta, 40-45 mm lata, acuminata, deorsum vix angustata ; rhachi nigra, brevissime cinereo-puberula ; pinnis horizontalibus, sessilibus, arti- culatis, subacutis, acroscopice auriculatis, siccis nigrescentibus ; indusiis aliquantum persistentibus. No. 332, Lakekamu. Very distinct from other species of the genus, in the articulation hardly below the middle of the stipe. Dryopteris orientalis is like it in this respect. PAPUAN FERNS. 81 NEPHROLEPIS Schott. 1. N. biserrata (Swtz.) Schott. Nos. 125, 162, Ambasi. No, 162 has the sori very near the sialyl Widespread. 2. N. cordifolia (L.) Presl. No. 224, Goodenough Bay, altitude 900 m. Widespread. 3. N. acuminata (Houtt.) Kuhn. No, 223, Goodenough Bay, altitude 900 m. Malaya. A rather shallowly lobed form. The indusia are frequently peltate; but the form is inconstant, and peltate ones are occasionally found on Bornean specimens. New to New Guinea. OLEANDRA Cavanilles. © O. neriiformis Cav. No. 192, Camusi River flats; No. 348, Lakekamu. Almost pantropic. As the specimens are fallen fronds the identification is not quite positive. HUMATA Cavyanilles. 1. H. sp. No. 326, Lakekamu. 2. H. gaimardiana (Gaud.) J. Sm. No. 165, common on the coast. Polynesia to Burma. 3. H. heterophylla (Sm.) Desv. No. 111, Waria River, altitude 300 m; No. 201, Camusi River flats. Malaya, Polynesia. : DAVALLIA Smith. 1. Davallia papuana Copel. spec. nova. Stipite 30 cm alto, basi paleis angustis 4 mm longis ferrugineis vestito, aliter rhachique glabris, brunneis; fronde 45 cm alta, deltoidea, fere quadripinnata; pinnis infimis fere 30 cm longis, deltoideis, acuminatis, thachibus sursum anguste alatis ; pinnulis ovatis, obtusis ; segmentis earum majoribus incisis, lobis vel dentibus plus minus cornutis, lamina glabra, coriacea; venis spuriis intercalatis; soro inframarginale; indusio 1 mm longo, aequilato vel angustiore, limbo plerumque rotundato, interdum obtuse et late cuspidato et reflexo. No. 245, Well marked among the species with false veins by the ‘position of the ares, combining then the characters of D. denticulata and D. diwvaricata. SCYPHULARIA Fée. 1. S. pentaphylla (Bl.) Fée. No. 183, Goodenough Bay, altitude 1,200 m. Malaya to Polynesia. 60 This is better known as Davallia pentaphylla Bl., but it seems to me advisable to recognize Fée’s genus as distinct. 1018232 82 COPELAND. ODONTOSORIA (Presl) Fée. 1. O. decipiens Cesati. No. 184, Goodenough Bay, altitude 1,200 m. New Guinea. This plant seems to me too near to the widespread O. chinensis ; but T have the judgment of Christ (Rés. Exp. Néerland. 8 (1910) 158) to follow in main- taining it as distinct. . 2. O. retusa (Cav.) J. Sm. : No, 170, Ambasi, a rather narrow form. Malaya to Melanesia. DENNSTAEDTIA Bernhardi. ‘l. Dennstaedtia sp., perhaps Dicksonia delicata F. Miiller, No. 244. This is near to but not identical with D. samoensis (Brack.) Moore. MICROLEPIA Presl. 1. M. Speluncae (L.) Moore. Nos. 174, 255. Neither of these is typical, and they are unlike, but they fall within the extremes of IM. Speluncae as commonly construed. TAPEINIDIUM (Presl) Christensen. 1. T. marginale Copel. spec. nova. Stipite 50 cm alto, rhachique supra nigris; fronde fere 60 cm alta; pinnis maximis 25 cm longis, 1 cm latis, herbaceis, serratis dentibus truncatis; soris ad apices plurium venarum, latis non altis, strictissime marginalibus. — No. 2838. A very large relative of 7, pinnatum, with strictly marginal sori, . usually about 2 mm wide and hardly 0.5 mm deep, evident when the frond is seen from above. The margin of the frond is slightly modified. The rachis and upper end of the stipe are square. eee 2. Tapeinidium sp. No. 261. _ This is distinct from any species known to me, but I suspect that it may be — Davallia longipinnula Cesati. LINDSAYA Dryander. " 1, Lindsaya sessilis Copel. species nova. Odontoloma gregis L. repentis, stipitibus vix 2 mm longis et indusiis fugacibus facile distinguendu; rhizomate paleaceo repente; fronde 20 em vel paullo ultra alta, 44.5 em lata, abrupte acuminata, pinnis utro- que latere ca, 35, infimis reductis, medialibus recurvis vel paullo deflexis, basi cuneatis, superne inciso-crenatis; soro apice lobi remoto, parvo, indusio minuto transeunte. No. 244. ‘ PAPUAN FERNS. 83 2. Lindsaya brevipes Copel. species nova. Species L. concinnae J. Sm. affinis, stipitibus brevibus et frondibus deorsum sensim angustatis distinguenda; stipitibus confertis, ca. 1 em altis; frondibus 20-30 cm altis, 15 mm latis, pinnis deorsum in rudi- menta 1-2 mm longa, integra vel fissa haud remota diminutis, media- libus ut L. concinnae, soris inframarginalibus, venis 1-5 insidentibus. No. 237, type; No. 266. Lindsaya gracilis Bl, has a wide-creeping rhizome with the fronds far apart and the pinnae lobed. 3. Lindsaya microstegia Copel. species nova. Rhizomate repente, 1.5 mm crasso; stipitibus inter se ca. 15 mm distantibus, frondium bipinnatarum ca. 12 cm altis; fronde normale bipinnata, ca. 30 cm alta, 20-25 em lata; pinnis utroque latere 2 vel 3, subsessilibus, 15-18 cm longis, 25 mm latis, acutis; pinnulis utroque latere ca. 30, brevistipitatis, basi cuneatis, apice rotundatis; margine inferiore integro plerumque recurvo, superiore crenulato; soris a margine * remotis, parvis, pinnulae quaeque ca. 10, ad venulas 1-2 insidentibus, indusio pallido, vix 0.2 mm longo, 0.5-1.0 mm lato, mox sporangiis occulto, — No. 242. : This species suggests L. Natwnae Baker, but is very distinct in the position of the sorus. ; 4. Lindsaya Kingii Copel. species nova. Eulindsaya, rhizomate repente, 3 mm crasso; stipitibus proximis, *5-30 cm ‘TARLAC NUEVA ECIJA PAMPANGA ° San Miguel de ; Arayat o : ayumo ; BULACAN Apalito |.“ Balwag Putilane, Quingua P-) CAVITE ee Indango Puate IV. MAP OF CENTRAL LUZON, SHOWING AMONG OTHER PLACES THE LOCALITIES CHIEFLY REFERRED TO IN THIS PAPER. ROBINSON: PHILIPPINE HATS. ] (PHIL. Journ. Sci., Vou. VI, No. 2. LEAF OF ANAJAO (Livistona sp.). SALACOT (OUTER AND INNER SURFACES). Puate V. [PuHIu. Journ. Sct., Vou. VI, No. 2. ROBINSON: PHILIPPINE HATS.] SALACOT (OUTER AND INNER SURFACES). SALACOT (OUTER AND INNER SURFACES). PiaTe VI. ROBINSON: PHILIPPINE HATS.] (PHIL. JouRN. Sct., Vou. VI, No. 2. Pate VII. VIEW IN PANGASINAN PROVINCE, SHOWING BURI PALM (A) AND BAMBOO (B). ROBINSON: PHILIPPINE HATS.] [PHIL. JouRN. SCI., VoL: VI, No. 2. Piate Vill. LEAF OF BURI PALM (Corvena sP.)- Euntat (Bativas). CALasiao 2 Fic. 4 Fic. Kk iy Pen ASN Ce Ke ee ¢ an bs hf | RAR AS cK ARE ‘ rin , ; ANE \ RY xy Me ; 4 4 AWS C4 ods 5,489,648 8 eS 4.4.8 . COCK Deak HATS. ] n x w Fb J = = a + (=) wi © z 9 < = D a < Ba Ww va a a 2 x a uw ° 2) z 2 - eg 2) a BunTAc (Lucsan). PHILIPPINE PLate IX. Fig. 1. ROBINSON : a ROBINSON: PHILIPPINE HATS.] [PHIL. JouRN. 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No. 3 BORNEAN FERNS COLLECTED BY C. J. BROOKS. By Epwin BrneHamM COPELAND. ‘(Prom the College of Agriculture, Los Banos, P. I.) During the past few years, I have received a number of very interest- *: ing collections of Bornean ferns, part of them from Mr. C. J. Brooks, Resident of Bidi, Sarawak, part from the Sarawak Museum. Two papers on these ferns have already been published.’ Additional novelties from Mr. Brooks’ collections are presented in the following pages. it is. ‘indeed @ pleasure to work on ferns so amply collected as are most of Eee and i Cyathea this advantage is especially great. x ngiopteris Brooksii Copel. spec. nova. Plate xm. A. ts om i Rhachi terete, glabra; pinnae rhachi 50 cm longa, terete, glabra; pin- re nulis majoribus ultra 20 cm longis, 2 cm latis, stipitatis, superioribus basi _ inaequalibus utroque latere rotundato-truncatis, fere integris; cauda 10-15 mm longa serrata terminatis, coriaceis, glabris, viridibus, costa supra de- pressa infra prominente ; venis sat conspicuis, opacis, venulis recurrentibus nullis; soris marginalibus, sporangiis 9-11, eg oe: fere atra, ven- ale brunnea, indusio meena 4 es Bau, Sarawak, Brooks sm it (908) Bot. 349-849, pl. 85 rer 10) Bot. 02601 : ane 134 COPELAND. Angiopteris ferox Copel. spec. nova. Plate XII. B. Stipite rhachique setis 10-15 mm longis atrofuscis duris obsitis ; pinna 70 em longa, rhachi deorsum setis minoribus sparsius vestita ; pinnulis utroque latere ca. 30, brevistipitatis, basi more A. evectae inaequalibus, infimis diminutis, medialibus 16 cm longis, 2 cm latis, apice acuminato leviter serrato, aliter ubique minute dentatis, coriaceis, costa utrinque prominente, nigra, infra praecipue deorsum squamulifera; venis con- spicuis, pellucidis ; venulis recurrentibus opacis, fere ad costam protensis ; soris plerumque contiguis, ca. 0.7 mm a margine remotis, sporangiis 7-9. Penrissen mountain, alt. 1,000-1,200 m, common, Brooks 26. “An enormous fern. The peculiarly hairy stipe and rachis give it a most bizarre appearance.” These parts are unknown on a large part of the species of Angiopteris; but this one has good distinguishing characters in the single pin- nules. These are in form like those of typical A. evecta (as represented by De- Vriese) ; but the sori are much closer to the margin; the latter is rather sharply toothed to the base; the false veins are opaque, and the constriction below the apex of the pinnule is less abrupt. A. similis has the venation almost invisible by reflected light. ; Cyathea arthropoda Copel. spec. nova. Plate XTIT. Stipite ad basin paleis stramineis 5-8 mm longis vestito, aliter glabro, inerme, fere 40 cm alto; fronde 50-60 em alta, 20-25 cm lata, pinnata ; pedicellis pinnarum 1 cm longis, ad rhachin articulatis ; pinnis usque ad 15 cm longis, 25-30 mm latis, basi cuneatis, valde acuminatis, integris vel leviter crenatis, papyraceis, glabris; soris 1-3-seriatis, parvis ; indusio fugace. Sarawak, Bungo Range, Brooks 8, April, 1909. Different from ©. moluccana in the relatively short and broad deciduous pinnae narrowed to the base, and long pedicels. Mr. Brooks has also sent me a very large form of OC. moluccana, collected at Bidi in August, 1907. Cyathea Hewittii Copel. spec. nova. Plate XIV. C. gregis C. glabrae (Blume) frondibus dimorphis; stipite ad basin paleis fuscis integris 8 mm longis vestito et foliolis in spinis reductis armato, aliter glabro, fere inerme, atropurpureo, 50 em alto; fronde glabra, bipinnata;: pinnis stipitatis 35 cm longis, pinnulis stipitatis, acutis, frondis sterilis usque ad 6 cm longis, 16 mm latis, infimis pro- funde, aliis levius incisis, lobis crenatis, falcato-rotundatis, subcoria- ceis, fertilis, usque ad 4 cm longis et 6 mm latis, lobis triangularibus, | soris multis, parvis, costularibus vel more C. glabrae deorsum divaricatis. Sarawak, Bongo mountain, Brooks and Hewitt 21. A most distinet species, although its affinities are clear, Cyathea recommutata Copel. Sarawak, Penrissen mountain, alt. 1,100 m, ©. J. Brooks 60. The species is founded on Cuming 396, from Malacca, and is reported from “8 Batjan by Christ. a BORNEAN FERNS. 135 The pinnae of Brooks’ specimen are exactly like Cuming’s; but Brooks’ specimen includes also the base of the rachis, which bears leaflets the pinnules of which are deciduous, leaving sharp spines, in one instance branched. I suspect that this is also Alsophila ramispina Hooker. Cyathea paraphysata Copel. spec. nova. Plate XV. - Stipite ad basin supra paleis fuscis lanceolatis, integris, usque ad 16 mm longis, acutis, et aliis minoribus vestito, sursum nudo, fere inerme, fusco, sieco 8 mm crasso, 40 cm alto; rhachi supra minute velutina; pinnis medialibus maximis, 40 cm longis, brevi-stipitatis, acuminatis, rhachi supra ut frondis, infra minute puberula; pinnulis sessilibus, obtusis, 6—7 em longis, 14 mm latis, ultra mediam laminam pinnatifidis, costa supra velutina, infra basin versus minute squamulacea; lobis integris, obtusis, falcatis, 3 mm latis, subcoriaceis, lamina glabra, infra pallida, costula infra paleis paucis minutis bullatis pallidis vestita; venis simplicibus utroque latere 4 vel 5; soris medialibus, exindusiatis, paraphysibus spo- rangia multo superantibus, trichoideis, haud clavatis. Sarawak, Penrissen mountain, alt. 150 m, Brooks 57. Near to ©. squamulata (Bl.) but having long paraphyses, and to C. obscura (Scort.) but the basal scales entire; and differing from both in the mostly blunt pinnules. Cyathea (Alsophila) Brooksii Copel. spec. nova. Plate XVI. Trunco 1 m alto; stipite ca. 45 em alto, purpureo-nigro, praecipue basin versus paleis stramineis minute nigro-ciliatis anguste lanceolatis aciculatis duris dense vestito; fronde ca. 75 cm alta, vix 60 cm lata, ovata, rhachi deorsum ut stipite, sursum pallida supra velutina infra glabrescente ; pinnis medialibus maximis, 30 em longis, 10 em latis, Subsessilibus, acuminatis, rhachi anguste alata; pinnulis subsessilibus, proximis, basi truncatis, obtusis, 15 mm latis, vix ad mediain laminam incisis; lobis proximis, valde faleatis, late oblongis, integris, at boven lamina glabra; costa supra sparse pilosa infra fere glabra; costulis infra Squamulis bullatis minutis deciduis albis ornatis; venis utroque latere 4-6, plerisque simplicibus; soris medialibus, exindusiatis, paraphysibus multis, trichoideis, haud clavatis nee multo ultra sporangia protensis. Sarawak, Penrissen mountain, from 900 m to the summit, common, Brooks 59. A relative of C. obscura (Scort.) from which it is sharply distinguished by the faleate lobes. The point of the lobe usually receives the uppermost acroscopic vein, instead of the apex of the costule; the two forks of a veinlet sometimes unite again. = - This is distinguished from the group of @. glabra by the numerous pale scales on the stipe. ‘ Cyathea borneensis Copel. spec. nova. ; Stipite fusco, nitido, spinoso, ad basin paleis rigidis nitidis atro-fuscis 1 mm latis, 10-13 mm _ longis vestito; rhachi aspera, supra indumento minuto et paleis sparsis deciduis linearibus fuscis vestita; pinnis media- 136 COPELAND. libus fere 60 cm longis, sessilibus, acuminatis, rhachibus infra sparse pustulosis, supra ut rhachi frondis; pinnulis subsessilibus, 10 cm longis, 2 cm latis, majoribus acuminatis, ad alam angustam pinnatifidis, costis supra velutinis, infra sparsissimis squamulis brunneis vestitis ; segmentis subfaleatis, obtusis, integris, 3-4 mm latis, coriaceis, infra pallidis, costis supra glabris infra rarius squamuliferis; venis utroque 8—10, plerisque furcatis ; soris costularibus, indusio in fronde visa patelliforme. Sarawak, Penrissen mountain, alt. 1,100 m, Brooks 58. : Very near 0. lanaensis Christ, but much larger in all parts, and less scaly. Balantium Copelandi Christ. Penrissen mountain, alt. 1,200 m, Brooks 23. Only one plant in very exposed situation on landslide. Previously known only from the Philippines. Dryopteris paucisora Copel. spec. nova. Lastraea gregis D. intermediae (Bl.) O. K., qua fronde haud deltoidea, paleis crinitis pallidis et venis glanduliferis differt : stipitibus confertis 3-6 em altis, paleis angustis crinitis pallide brunneis horizontalibus usque ad 3 mm longis et aliis minutissimis vestitis; fronde ca. 12 cm alta, 3-4 em _ lata, lanceolata, rhachi ut stipite, paleis sursum decrescentibus; pinnis— infimis deflexis, quam sequentes paullo brevioribus, segmentis basalibus liberis ; pinnis sequentibus subsessilibus, oblongis, apice rotundatis, fere ad costam pinnatifidis ; segmentis oblongis, obtusis, herbaceis, venis supra setis paucis, infra pilis minutis glandulosis obsitis; venulis simplicibus; soris medialibus, solummodo ad venulam primam acroscopicam impositis, parvis; indusio parvo, ciliato. Penrissen mountain, alt. 900 m, on vertical rocks in crevices, Brooks 45. In spite of having 6 fertile fronds, this may be a juvenile specimen, but not. of any species known to me. Dryopteris acanthocarpa Copel. spec. nova. Plate XVII. Rhizomate 4 mm crasso, repente ; stipitibus confertis, (frondis fertilis) — 35 cm altis, nudis; fronde trifoliata, pinnis lateralibus sat remotis sub- sessilibus, in axilla bulbiferis, 10 em longis, fere 5 cm latis, abrupte acuminatis, basi rotundatis, subintegris, glabris, coriaceis, rubidis; pinna terminale 15 cm alta, 8 em lata, crenata ; venulis goniopteroideis ; soris- inter costam et marginem usque ad 20, subcostularibus, orbicularibus vel ellipticis, exindusiatis; sporangiis spinis validis albis rectis vel sub- curvis ornatis. ; Penrissen mountain, alt. 900 m, on moist rocks, Brooks 54. A relative of D, triphylla, which has narrow pinnae, meniscioid sori, and hooked hairs on the sporangia, and of D. rubida which has numerous pinnae and naked sporangia. Those of D. cuspidata are also naked. ‘ BORNEAN FERNS. 137 Dryopteris compacta Copel. spec. nova. Plate XVIII. Species gregis D. glandulosae (Bl.) O. K., pinnis imbricato-auriculatis facile distinguenda; rhizomate adscendente 5 mm crasso 3 stipitibus con- fertis, frondis sterilis ca. 25 cm, fertilis ca. 30 em altis, basi paleacea excepta glabris; fronde sterile ca. 30 cm alta, 10 em lata, acuminata, pinnata, rhachi straminea supra velutina, infra glabra; pinnis sessilibus infimis paullo minoribus, deflexis, medialibus horizontalibus, acuminatis, versus apicem acute grosse serratis, basi inferne subcordatis, superne acute auriculatis supra costam imbricatis, papyraceis, glabris; venis anastomo- santibus duabus ; fronde fertile paullo minore; soris parvis, orbicularibus ; indusio persistente piloso. Bungo Range, Brooks 4 (Type) ; Santubong mountain, Brooks & Hewitt. Dryopteris mirabilis Copel. spec. nova. Plate XIX. Nephrodium gregis D. glandulosae (Bl.) O. K., rhizomate adscen- dente, 4 mm crasso; stipitibus confertis, frondis sterilis 40 cm, fertilis 55 cm altis, puberulis; frondibus trifoliatis; sterilis, pinna apicale ultra 7 em, lateralibus 3.5 em latis sessilibus, subintegris, herbaceis, ad costas dense aliter sparse pubescentibus; fronde fertile paullo minore, crenata; soris paribus, multiseriatis, orbicularibus ; indusio pilis albis vestito. Bidi, Brooks 16a. 7 Tectaria Brooksii Copel. spec. nova. Plate XX. A. Verisimiliter Polypodium Labrusca in Synopsis Filicum p. 361, non Hooker Sp. Fil. 5: 73, ¢. 285 B. Collectio Lobbii e speciebus duabus similibus composita videtur, quarum T. Brooksii a T. Labrusca (teste icone Hookeri) paleis basalibus latioribus, fronde minore angustiore, integriore, obscuriore, glabra, soris plus elongatis distincta. Bidi, on limestone, Brooks 26a. * ___ Brooks sends also 7. Labrusca, No. 26; plate 109 A, with the following note: “IT can not agree that these two specimens are the same, P. Labrusca. They _ commonly occur on the limestone, and often together. They are always distinct. Even very young plants show the same differences in form and texture.” Asplenium Brooksii Copel. spec. nova. Plate XX. B. Stipitibus confertis, validis, brevibus (1-2 cm longis), paleis angustis usque ad 3.5 mm longis sparsis plerisque adpressis vestitis ; fronde ca. 80 cm alta, 10 cm lata, rufo-viride, infra pilis minutis ternatis vestita: vix aliter ab A. amboinense Willd. diversum. ' Bau, Sarawak, Brooks 25, 1909. 1 Near A. amboinense, but larger and broader, with fewer and smaller scales ‘at the base, spores (in my specimens) more spiny, and distinguished especially : by the pubescence of fine, short hairs, borne in threes with a common base. The ae fall slightly short of the margin, but some of them reach the costa. Dedicated to its discoverer, Mr. C. Ji Brooks. : 138 COPELAND. Lindsaya nitida Copel. spec. nova. Plate XXI. Synaphlebium, rhizomate repente, 1.5 mm crasso, paleis minutis ves- tito; stipitibus haud remotis, ca. 30 em altis, brunneis, rhachibusque quadrangularibus et profunde sulcatis; fronde visa 15 cm alta, 23 cm lata, bipinnata; pinnis 5, terminale et lateralibus oppositis biparibus, acuminatis, sessilibus; pinnulis sessilibus, ca. 12 mm longis, 5 mm latis basiscopice (sensu frondis) integris, acroscopice integris vel levissime et late incisis, apice rotundatis et soro angusto inframarginale circumdatis, papyraceis, subdiaphanis, glabris supra nitentibus; venis anastomosan- tibus, areolis longis. Penrissen mountain, alt. 900 m, Brooks 12. “Fairly common, of constant form.” L, Hewittii has numerous small pinules, the areolae being, as in other related species, shorter and broader. There is usually but one sorus, rarely another small one in a lobe. Lindsaya orbiculata (Lam.) Mett. var. odontosorioides var. nova. Fronde lanceolata, pinnulis obeuneatis, plus minus profunde incisis, lobis ca. 1.5 mm latis, venis 2 in soro subapicale confusis. Tringos, Brooks 19, 1909. This fern is so distinct in appearance that I at first mistook it for an Odon- tosoria. However, its affinity to L. tenera Dry. is unmistakably very close, and until the group of L. orbiculata can be studied as a whole, with very ample material, it seems better not to try to separate its forms as species. Adiantum pulcherrimum Copel. spec. nova. Plate XXII. Adiantellum, stipitibus confertis, atrocastaneis, nitidis, deorsum paleis brunneis angustis vestitis; fronde deltoidea, 25 em alta, tripinnata, rha- chibus supra velutinis ; pinnis utroque latere 2 vel 3, superioribus pinnatis inferioribus bipinnatis; pinnulis stipitatis, dimidiatis, apice rotundatis vel truncatis dentatis, acroscopice lobatis, ca. 17 mm longis, 7 mm latis, coriaceis, supra atroviridibus, infra caeruleis; venis liberis, supra sulcatis ; soris in apices exsculptos loborum impositis, indusio coriaceo nigro, obreniforme, usque ad 2.2 mm lato. Penrissen mountain, alt. 1,150 m, on dry sandstone ledge under overhanging rock, Brooks 2. Distinguished from its Malayan relatives by the glaucous nether surface and large, black indusia. A. affine Willd. has naked rachises, and A. fulvwm Raoul segments attenuate at the apex. : Pteris rangiferina Pres]. Penrissen mountain, alt. 1,200 m, on dry sheltered rock, Brooks 15.° This is a form with but few pinnae, all simple, the fertile recurved and the sterile very broad; in essentials, however, it is like specimens from Java. From the Javan material in hand, it seems probable that Pteris Dalhousiae and Pteris rangiferina both exist in Java, but are decidedly distinct. Taenitis Brooksii Copel. spec. nova. Plate XXIII. A. . ; Stipitibus confertis, basibus paleis minutis angustis nigris vestitis, aliter glabris, rubidis, 3-4 enr altis; fronde simplice, ca. 8 cm alta, 12 BORNEAN FERNS. 139 mm lata, basi abrupte cuneata et anguste paullo decurrente, deinde sensim ad apicem angustata, integra, glabra, dura. Bungo Range, alt. 900 m, Brooks 3. Recognizable by the narrow, acuminate, not cordate, very rigid fronds. Polypodium sparsipilum Copel. spec. nova. Plate XXIII. B. Eupolypodium rhizomate paleis brunneis nitidis late lanceolatis 1.5 mm longis dense obtecto; stipitibus confertis, filiformibus 6-9 mm altis, pilis horizontalibus 1.5 mm longis ornatis; fronde ea. 5 em alta, 3-4 mm lata, subintegra, herbacea, diaphana, pilis sparsissimis vestita; venis plerisque furcatis; soris orbicularibus, subsuperficialibus, subcostalibus. Bengkarum, alt. 900 m, Brooks 14. This little fern seems to be nearest to P. trichopodum F. Mueller, of New Guinea. The veins terminate in hydathodes. ; Polypodium setaceum Copel. spec. nova. Plate XXIV. Eupolypodiun rhizomate repente usque ad 2.5 mm crasso, paleis fer- rugineis linearibus 2-3 mm longis vestito; frondibus ad ramos breves articulatis, confertis, setaceis, 55 cm et ultra longis, 1.5 mm latis, in stipitem brevem attenuatis, integris, glabris, opacis, costa infra promi- nente, supra sulcata, lamina utroque latere costae supra convexa, infra concava, venis occultis; soris fere costalibus elongatis. . : Tringos, Sarawak river, Brooks 6. This suggests P. bisuleatum Hooker, but has the fronds decidedly more slender and very different in cross section, and closely clustered. ; : THE DRYNARIA GROUP. There is probably no group of organisms known which are more distinct in appearance but more evidently homogenetic than these are. Polypodium heracleum may stand in the place of the parent. By diag- nosis and by unquestionable affinity it is a Polypodium 3 oF if Poly- podium be broken up it is still in whatever division contains P. musae- folium. But it is no less certainly related to Drynaria quercifolia. The status which shall be given to the individual members of this group, and the size of the minor groups are purely matters of judgment. We may keep all these ferns in one genus, even in Polypodium, and find justification enough in their obvious homogeneity—and this is the most important single criterion; or we may recognize one distinct daughter- genus, and include in it P. heracleum or leave the latter with its for- bears. At the other extreme, we may recognize a considerable number of genera, most of them of a single species each; and these genera will have distinguishing characters as obvious as anyone can reasonably demand. Polypodium coronans, Dryostachyum pilosum, and the Bor- hean fern to be described below will each constitute a new genus if this plan be followed. 140 COPELAND. I have preferred to compromise simplicity of generic characterization with phylogenetic unity, and recognize the following minor groups, which seem to key out approximately along their lines of evolution: Without distinct humus-collecting leaves. Fronds borne on the axis of the rhizome. Sori not coalescing into patches nor borne on specialized segments. § Drynariopsis Sori round P. heracl Sori linear ; P. coronans Sori composite, but not crossing the main veins, on the upper segments. Aglaomorpha Sori linear, the length of the upper segments. Sterile segments confluent Merinthosorus Frond pinnate Photinopteris Fronds borne on specialized branches : Thayeria With distinct humus-collecting leaves Drynaria Thayeria as here construed contains species with very distinct fertile leaves. The Luzon plant which I identified specifically with Polypodium nectariferum Beccari of New Guinea, turns out to have fertile leaf-. apices like Aglaomorpha meyeniana, making it even generically distinct if one be disposed to carry the separation to at all a fine point. | For the present, however, the fertile frond of 7. Cornucopia of Mindanao is unknown, dnd it is the type of its genus. AG peaeanth PHA Schott emend. Gerins Polypodiearum ex affinitate Polypodii (Drynariopsidis) hera- clei derivatum, frondibus rhizomate ipso ortis non vel imperfecte arti- culatis, sterilibus uniformibus, venatione Drynarii, soris ad pine api- calem frondis restrictis, compositis. The genus was described by Schott in 1834 to contain the single spe- cies A. meyeniana, and is identical with Psygmium Presl, 1836. In 1841 Smith proposed the genus Dryostachyum for two related species, D. splendens and D. pilosum, which have generally been confused, but are very distinct. Dryostachyum and Aglaomorpha differ only in that the lamina of the fertile segments of the latter is more reduced. By itself I do not regard this as a’ sufficient generic character unless its recognition will result in very great convenience. If one be disposed to unite this whole group in one genus, A glaomorpha is its oldest generic name, Drynari not having been used in that sense until seven years later. Sori forming several rows. . § Hemistachyum Sori forming one row on each side of costa. Lamina of fertile segments continuous i § Dryostachyum Lamina cut away between sori § Psygmium BORNEAN FERNS. 141 § HEMISTACHYUM. % Soris compositis, inter costam et marginem pluribus, 1. A. Brooksii Copel. spec. nova. Plate XXV. Fronde ca. 120 cm alta, ad basin sicca, 35 cm lata, humifera, arti- culatione vestigiale, parte apicale 25 cm alta solummodo pinnata fer- tile; pinnis fertilibus usque ad 18 cm longis, 15 mm vel ultra latis, apud rhachin dilatatis, soris compositis, inter costam et marginem 3 vel 4, inter yenas 2 aut per coalescentiam 1. Sarawak, Penrissen mountain, alt. up to 900 m, common but seldom fertile. Brooks 39 (Type); Benkarum mountain, on summit, Brooks 37. The latter is the plant mentioned in a former paper, Philip. Journ. Sei. 5 (1910) Bot. 285, as an apparent hybrid between P. heracl and Dryostachy plend This is clearly the most primitive known Aglaomorpha, and the specialization of its fertile segments is neither very great nor very firmly fixed. The type has, below the strictly fertile segments, one with a fertile tip; and the Beng- karum specimen has only two fertile segments, which are a little below the apex. The whole group is a very new one, and I have individuals of each of the other species of the genus, in which the distinction between fertile and sterile segments is more or less broken down. : § DRYOSTACHYUM. 2. A. splendens (J. Sm.) Copel. comb. nova. Dryostachyum splendens J. Sm, Journ. Bot. 3 (1841) 399. Bot. 3 (1841) 399. This species has very large, usually squarish sori, and a dilated humus-collect- ing base. : 3. A. pilosa (J. Sm.) Copel. comb. nova. Dryostachyum pilosum J. Sm., Journ. Bot. 3 (1841) 399 nomen. : Base of leaves narrowed to a stipe, and not collecting humus. Scattered fertile segments are not at all rare. In the absence of the humiferous base, in the instability of the localization of fertile segments, and in the slender rhizome, this species resembles Polypodium species less specialized and more primitive than P. heracleum and P. coronans; however I am of the opinion that this resemblance is not proof of near affinity, and that A. pilosa is a simplified descendant of humus-collecting species. Another possibility is that it is a hybrid of A. splen- dens and Photinopteris speciosa. é § PSYGMIUM. 4. A. meyeniana Schott. : The type of the genus. ‘\ PLaTE XII. XII. XIV. XV. XVI. XVII. XVIII. Ix. XX. ».0.4 & XXII. XXIII. XXIV. XXV. ILLUSTRATIONS. (Photographs by Charles Martin, Bureau of Science.) a, Angiopteris Brooksii. 6, Angiopteris ferox. Cyathea arthropoda. Cyathea Hewittii. Cyathea paraphysata. Cyathea Brooksii. Dryopteris acanthocarpa. Dryopteris compacta. Dryopteris mirabilis. a, Tectaria Labrusca. 6, Tectaria Brooksii. Lindsaya nitida. Adiantum pulcherrimum. a, Taenitis Brooksii. , Polypodium sparsipilum. Polypodium setaceum,. Aglaomorpha Brooksii. 143 CoPELAND: BORNEAN FERNS.] [PHIL. JouRN. Scti., Vou. VI, No. 3. PLATE XII. a, ANGIOPTERIS BROOKSII. }, ANGIOPTERIS FEROX. CopELAND: RORNEAN FERNS. ] [Putr. Journ. Sct., Vou. VI, No. 3. CM PTA Piate XII. CYATHEA ARTHROPODA. CoPELAND: BORNEAN FERNS. ] [PuHt. Journ. Sct., Vou. VI, No. 3. 15 CM. Sl Piate XV, CYATHEA PARAPHYSATA. CopELAND: BORNEAN FERNS. ] (PHIL. JourRN. Scr., Vou. VI, No. 3. Piate XVI. CYATHEA BROOKSII. CoPELAND: BORNEAN FERNS. ] (PHI. Journ. Sct., Vou. VI, No, 3. Piate XVII. DRYOPTERIS ACANTHOCARPA. CoPELAND: BORNEAN FERNS. ] [Prr. JourN. Sct., Vou. VI, No. 3. Piate XVIII. DRYOPTERIS COMPACTA. CoPpELAND: RORNEAN FERNS. ] [PHIL. JourRN. Sct., VoL. VI, No. 3. Piate XIX. DRYOPTERIS MIRABILIS. CoPpELAND: BORNEAN FERNS.] (PHIL. JourN. Sct., Vou. VI, No. 3 b a Pirate XX, a, TECTARIA LABRUSCA. ——— b, TECTARIA BROOKSII. CopELAND: RORNEAN FERNS. ] [PuHrIn. Journ. Sct., Vou. VI, No. 3. 1I9:-CMs Pet Pirate XX1. LINDSAYA NITIDA- CopPELAND: BORNEAN FERNS 1 (PHIL. JouRN. Sct., VoL. VI, No. 3. 15 CM. Cee Piate XXII. ADIANTUM PULCHERRIMUM. CopELAND: BORNEAN FERNS.] [Put. Journ. Sct., Vou. VI, No. aH ek tad Piate XXIII. a, TAENITIS BROOKSI!. b, POLYPODIUM SPASSIPILUM CopELAND: BORNEAN FERNS. ] [PHIL. Journ. Sct., Vou. VI, N ued N. or Le , No. 3. i5.C:M.. baa ee eee PLaTe XXIV. POLYPODIUM SETACEUM. > 3 VI, No, 3. Scr., VoL. JOURN. (PHIL. CopELAND: BORNEAN FERNS. ] “ wage 8 Pray) ingens ee cys ) Pirate XXV. AGLAOMORPHA BROOKSII. Tue PHILIPPINE JOURNAL OF Scrence, .C. Borany. Vol. VI, No. 3, July, 1911. NEW OR INTERESTING PHILIPPINE FERNS, V. By Epwin BINGHAM COPELAND. (From the College of Agriculture, Los Bajos, P. , CYATHEA Smith. Cyathea Robinsonii Copel. spec. nova. Species foliis tripinnatis C. integrae J. Sm. affinis; trunco 2-4 m alto, 4 em crasso; stipite ca. 40 cm longo, basi paleis brunneis linear- ibus integris fere 2 cm longis vestito, sursum atropurpureo minute squa- muloso, hispido; fronde ca. 1 m alta, 70 cm lata, abrupte acuta, rha- chibus praesertim minoribus paleis linearibus fulvis densissime et aliis minutis vestitis, pinnis apicalibus simplice pinnatis exceptis utroque latere ca. 9, infimis paullo reductis haud remotis, maximis medialibus, fere 40 cm longis, 16 cm latis, stipitula 2-3 cm longa; pinnulis stipitu- latis horizontalibus, 16 mm. latis; pinnulis!! usque mediam pinnulam! liberis, infimis etiam brevissime pedicellatis, anguste ellipticis, obtusis, integris, supra glabris infra ad venulas setosis, supra purpureo-nigris, infra caeruleis, rigide papyraceis; venulis utroque latere ca. 6, furcatis ; soris medialibus, indusio globoso, fisso. ‘ Luzon, Province of Tayabas, Mount Binuang, Bur. Sci. 9394 Robinson, alt. 875 m. As already stated this is a relative of 0. integra, but differs in various details. HYMENOPHYLLUM Smith. = ; menophyllum subflabellatum Ces. UZ0N, Province of Laguna, Mount Maquiling, altitude 1,050 m, leg. Copeland. The published description of this minute fern is inadequate, but contains nothing to prevent this determination. It was originally described from ene DRYOPTERIS Adans. Dryopteris sessilipinna Copel. spec. nova. Rhizomate repente, 2-3 mm crasso, ligneo; stipitibus confertis, 5-15 cm altis, minute pubescentibus, pinnis remotis in rudimenta vix 2 mm - longa abrupte contractis adspersis; fronde 12-20 cm alta, 4-5 cm lata, sursum sensim longe attenuata, pinnata, supra mediam — ae 146 COPELAND. natifida, rhachi pube falcato-inflexa minuta dense vestita ; -pinnis ses- silibus, infimis deflexis exceptis basi truncatis, apice rotundatis, 8 mm latis, approximatis, 4 ad 4 ad costam incisis, lobis truncatis, interdum serrulatis, minute ciliatis, subcoriaceis, costis et venis infra setosis, lamina nuda; venis utroque latere ca. 4, infimis anastomosantibus : soris media- libus, indusio rudimentario. Necros, Mt. Canlaon, alt. 1,200 m, Merrill 6934 (type). Mrnpanao, Camp Keithley, Mrs. Clemens s. n. In appearance very like D. exigua (J. Sm.) O. K. which however is a Thelyp- teris and without reduced pinnae on the stipe. Lastraea exigua J. Sm. seems to me to be a valid species, although it has been reduced to D. philippina (Pr.) C. Chr. In the description of the latter, Presl states clearly that it includes but part of the plants in Cuming’s No. 251; and the fern he describes is smaller in all parts: than our specimen of that number. We have no plant in the group with such an indusium as Pres] describes. Lastraea exigua J. Sm. is a nomen nudum, and Cuming 251 and 272 are cited as specimens. The first diagnosis accompanying the use of © this specific name is given by Mettenius, Aspidium No. 180, 1858. He distinguishes two forms, a and B, the first of which is said to be Phegop- teris nervosa Fée. This fern can be identified with absolute certainty: — it is neither of the plants mentioned by Smith, both of which fall in the form 8 of Mettenius. It is represented in our herbaria by speci- mens collected in Surigao, by Bolster. Fée’s name is unfortunatel y not valid in Dryopteris. In publishing the combination Dryopteris exigua. 0. Kuntze refers to Hooker’s N. ephrodium exiguum ; and Hooker’s diag- nosis is translated from Fée’s of P. nervosa. Under the circumstances this fern is to be called D. exigua (Mett.) O. K. Lastraea exigua J. Sm. is thus without a name, and for the plant which I have best ground to construe as this, since it is our Cuming °51 and is not D. philippina (Presl) C, Chr., I propose the name _ Dryopteris confusa. Thelypteris rhizomate repente, stipitibus confertis ca. 20 em altis, minute puberulis; fronde 20-30 em alta, 4—5 cm lata; pinnis sessi- libus, basi truncatis hand cordatis, apice obtusis vel rotundatis, utrinque 4 ad 2 ad costam incisis, subauriculatis; costis et venis infra sparsissime puberulis; soris costalibus, indusio minuto, fugace. Luzon, Cuming 251 3 Nueva Vizeaya, Bur. Sci. 8271 Ramos. Dryopteris philippina (Presl) ©. Chr. is very probably the plant of Cuming which we have under his number 272. Except as to the indusium it fits Presl’s description satisfactorily. The indusium is small and transient, and can be detected on a small part of the sori, which in our specimen are in excellent condition. Some scales or fragments of abortive sporangia sometimes can be PHILIPPINE FERNS, V. 147 seen subtending the sorus, and these may be more evident in Presl’s specimen. The pinnae are decidedly auricled, and much more cut on the upper than on the lower side, in both of which respects, as well as in the hairiness of the veins, the stature, and the medial sori, it agrees with the description, but differs from our specimen of No. 251. . Still another species very similar in external appearance is D. aoristisora (Harr.) C. Chr. In spite of the fact that the lower veins anastomose, I regard it as nearly related to the preceding. Dryopteris melanophlebia Copel. spec. nova. Species gregis D. canescentis (Bl.) C. Chr. rhizomate repente, stipi- tibus approximatis, frondium sterilium 2-3 cm, fertilium 4-10 em altis, primo setosis, glabrescentibus; fronde parte terminale 4-5 cm longa, 1-2 cm lata, obtusa, integra vel deorsum una-duabus lobata et infra eam utroque latere pinnis 1-3 rotundatis 2-4 mm longis sessilibus vel adnatis composita, coriaceo-papyracea, praeter costam deorsum pilosam mox glabra; venis conspicuis, infra plerisque nigris, venulis plerumque 2 connexis; soris nudis, ad venulas plus minus elongatis, costularibus. Necros, Mt. Canlaon, alt. 900 m, Merrill 6959. In appearance, near D. simplicifolia, which has hairy indusia and sori remote from the main veins. D. canescens var. subsimplicifolia Christ has the lower pinnae not very reduced. : DAVALLODES Copel. Davallodes Kingii (Baker) Copel. comb. nov. Davallia Kingii Baker in Hook. Icon: (1886) pl. 1622. Java. MONOGRAMMA Schkubr. Monogramma capillaris Copel. spec. nova. Eumonogramma, rhizomate repente, 0.5 mm crasso, paleis atrocastaneis _angustis 1 mm longis densissime obtecto; frondibus dense approximatis, stipite castaneo filiforme 15 mm longo incluso ca. 4 cm altis, 0.5-1.0 mm latis, prope apicem haud dilatatis; soris unilateralibus continuis versus marginem apertis. Neeros, Mt. Canlaon, Merrill 6961.. ae In appearance more like M. dereicarpa than M. trichoidea, which is much finer; differing from the former in the approximate fronds, which are longer and not widened near the apex. The sori may be more than 2 cm long. Asa Tare exception, a sorus appears on the other side of the costa or is indicated by @ groove. ‘ CURRANIA Copel. Currania oyamensis (Baker) Copel. comb. nov. ypodium oyamense Baker in Journ. Bot. 15 (1877) 366. Pilieidiam: Krasori Franch & Gavel. Buuih: PL doped (1810) $44; Hookers Teones pl. 1668. Dryopteris oyamensis C. Chr. Enum. Fil. 282. China and Japan. . eS 148 ‘COPELAND. POLYPODIUM Linn. Polypodium pulogense Copel. spec. nova. Epiphyticum, caudice breve, basibus stipitum et paleis paucis pallide brunneis integris immerso; stipitibus brevissimis, confertis, haud arti- culatis; fronde 5-8 cm alta, 5-7 mm lata, utrinque angustata, pilis sparsis usque ad 1.5 mm longis fragilibus dein deciduis vestita, sub- coriacea, vix ad costam pinnatifida, segmentis ipsorum latitudine sepa- ratis, ala angusta connexis, anguste triangularibus, acutis; venula in segmento sterile quoque una, in segmento fertile apud basin furcata, et ramo breve superiore solummodo monosoro; soro superficiale, orbiculare. Luzon, Benguet subprovince, Mount Pulog, alt. 2,750 m, epiphytic in the upper edge of the mossy forest, Copeland, P. P. E. 130, Merrill 6388. Polypodium pteropus Blume.’ Luzon, Province of Laguna, San Antonio, For. Bur. 17656 Curran. \ This species occurs from India and China to Papua, but I have not before seen it from the Philippines. The plants were entirely submerged, and believed by Mr. Curran to have been so at all times. The fronds are small, and rarely divided but fruiting freely. Except that the major areolae are strongly bullate, it does not differ from Chinese subaquatic specimens. THe PHILIPPINE JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, C. Borany. Vol. VI, No. 3, July, 1911. PHILIPPINE GYMNOSPERMS. By Frep W. FoxworTHy. (From the Botanical Section of the Biological Laboratory, Bureau of Science,” Manila, P. I.) This group is of relatively small economic importance in the eastern tropics; but it affords some interesting problems .of distribution. Of the 26 species of Gymnosperms now known from the Philippines, 17 are extra-Philippine in distribution, as shown in the accompanying table. Distribution of Philippine Gymnosperms. : Th Species. ia d Cochin China. Malay Peninsula. Burma. th Pacific Australia. Islands. | Siam an: ~ | Borneo. x | British Ind: x | Moluccas. x | New Guinea. : x Cyeas circinalis _..--------| C. sp. (Culion)._----:..=---|---| C. sp. (Palawan) ------- ~--|--- Dacrydium falciforme ---- - D. elatum ; x des x | Africa. | x | Ceylon. ea} | P. amarus P. glaucus P. brevifolius. nil } | WomaMees 2 orcas Peace Wem | Pi cbildlis 2 2eeiote sh a ae P. polystachyus P, neriifolius P. philippinensis Taxus wallichiana ._ Agathis alba .......-..-.. -- Pinus insularis P. merkusii : x) Gnetum gnemon ___._-----| X | X | X G. arboreum G. latifolium * G. minus | Tout hicecceaada tal FSR 1026012 150 _. FOXWORTHY. It is significant that Celebes, Borneo, Sumatra, Java, and the Moluccas are the regions which have the largest number of species in common with the Islands, and there is not a single species common to the Phil- ippines and Formosa. ‘This certainly indicates that our Gymnosperms have reached the Islands from the south and not from the north. ECONOMIC IMPORTANCE. ° - Cycadaceae. Cycas circinalis is used fecal as a food plant, both the fruit and young leaves being used. Cycas revoluta is introduced and commonly cultivated as an ornamental. | Taxaceae. The wood of some species may be used locally; but the species are mostly mountain forms, of infrequent occurrence and but little known. Pinaceae. Agathis alba is of wide distribution in the mountains, and the resin is the Manila copal of commerce. It is extensively collected and exported. It is used locally for torches and medicinally, and is said to be one of the best preventives of leech bites. The pines furnish a supply of turpentine which is used locally. The wood of Pinus insularis is used in the northern part of the Island of Luzon; but the supply is not great enough to make it important as a commercial timber. _ Gnetaceae. Gnetwm gnemon has very strong bast fibers in its cortex and is used locally for cordage. The young leaves are tender and are cooked and eaten. G. latifolium also has very strong bast fibers and is similarly used. In some sections, the Negritos use the bark to make the strings for their bows. The fruit is edible and is generally eaten when cooked. TAXONOMY. The Gymnosperms are characterized by woody stems; vascular bun- dles of the axis arranged in a ring, a regular increase in thickness being in most cases effected by a closed cambium layer which produces phloem on the outer and xylem on the inner surface; embryo straight and embedded in endosperm ; radicle developing a vigorous tap-root; flowers unisexual and (except Gnetacew) without perianth; microsporangia oF pollen-sacs always borne on the under side of the microsporangium ; ovulate scales not completely inclosed. . CLASS I. CYCADALES. CYCADACEAE. Stem tall or short with internodes suppressed, usually unbranched, | bearing a crown of large compound leaves. Dioecious. Pollen-sacs and | ovules foliar, sporophylls not interspersed with sterile leaves, generally | aggregated in terminal cones. Vascular bundles of stem collateral and PHILIPPINE GYMNOSPERMS. 151 endarch, or. concentric; of leaves mesarch. ‘Embryo generally dicotyle- donous, attached to a well-developed suspensor, and embedded. in a copious endosperm. CYCAS L. Carpophore with 8-4, rarely two seeds. Stem growing up through the female flower-cluster. Leaflets with only a midrib, About 16 species in tropical Asia, Australia, and Polynesia. KEY TO PHILIPPINE SPECIES. a. Leaflets less than 1 cm wide, almost as thick as wide. b. Lower leaflets thorny -...------:-s---s:-ss-sseertrn 0. revoluta _ bb. Lower leaflets not thorny... 1. GC. sp. aff. cairnsiana aa. Leaflets 1 em or more wide, not thick like the two preceding. b, Staminate cone 20-25 cm long and 5-7 cm in diam. .... 3. 0. sp. from Palawan. bb. Staminate cones much thicker in proportion to length than the preceding. 2. C. circinalis Cycas revoluta Thunb. Fl. Jap. (1784) 229; DC. Prodr. 16° (1868) 526; Vidal, Cat. Pl. Prov. Manila (1880) 46; F. Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 2125 Forbes & Hemsley in Journ. Linn. Soe. Bot. 26 (1902) 559. China, Japan, and Formosa. This plant is common in cultivation in the Philippines; but is not found out- side of cultivation. ° Luzon, Manila, Merrill s. n. "1. Cyeas sp. aff. CO. cairnsiana F. Miiller, Fragm. 10: 63. Cunton, Merrill 657, a single sterile leaf in our herbarium. This was compared by Mr. Merrill with a fragment of the type of C. cairnsiana in the herbarium at Kew, and he says that it was the only specimen there with leaflets like and as narrow as the Australian plant. ~ 2. Cycas circinalis L: Sp. Pl. (1753) 1188; Mid. Monographia Cycadearum (1842) 27; Prodr. System. Cyead. (1861) 7, 17; Blanco Fi. Filip. (1837) 745; ed. 2 (1845) 513; Blume, Rumphia 4 (1848) 11, 15; t. 176B, 176; DC. Prodr. 16? (1868) 526; Vidal Cat. Pl. Prov. Manila (1880) 46; Sinopsis Atlas (1883) 43, t. 99; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 212; Dyer in Hook. f. Fl. Brit. Ind. 5 (1888) 656; Warburg, Monsunia 1 °(1900) 178; Usteri Beitr. Kenn. Phil. Veg. (1905) 134; Wight in Contrib. U. 8. Nat. Herb. 9 (1905) 71, 252, pls. 8 155 Merr. Bur. Govt. Lab. Publ. (Philip.) 27 (1905) 825 Phil. Journ. Sei. 1 (1906) Suppl. 24; Phil. Journ. Sci. 3 (1908) Bot. 394; Koorders-Schumacher Syst. Verz. Herb. Koord. 3 (1911) Cycadaceae [1.] Plate XXVI, figs. 1, 2. Stems tall, said sometimes to attain a height of 12 m, usually un- branched, but sometimes divided at the apex of the stem into three, four, or five branches. Sometimes as much as 50 cm in diameter. Leaves 1.5-2.5 m long; petiole 50-60 cm, with short distant slightly deflexed spines to near the base; leaflets about 90-100. Adult leaflets about 20-30 em long, about 1 cm wide, elongate-linear-lanceolate, sub- falcate, acuminate. Male cone shortly peduncled, often 50 em long, cylindric-ovoid ; antheriferous scales 2-5 cm long, 1-2 em wide, obovate- deltoid, prolonged into an upward curved subulate acumen. — 2.5 em 152 FOXWORTHY. long, clothed with a brown tomentum externally, glabrous above. Carpo- phylls about 30 cm long, long-stalked, with 3-5 pairs of ovules above the middle, ferruginous-tomentose; blade 7-10 cm long, 2.5-3.5 em wide. Seeds 3-5 em long. Baranes Isuanps, Camiguin, Worcester A, Bur. Sci. 3977 Fenia; Batan, For. Bur. 15289 Agudo. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur. 17251 Curran: Prov- ince of Zambales, For. Bur. 6327, 6328 Curran: Province of Bataan, Merrill 3257, Whitford 269, 1325, For. Bur, 2577 Meyer, For. Bur. 7381, 7513 Curran, Cuzner 22, Whitford & Foaworthy s. n., For, Bur, 12397 Curran & Merritt: Province of Rizal, Bur. Sci. 3281 Ramos: Province of La Laguna, For. Bur. 10156 Curran: Province of Tayabas, For, Bur. 10319, 10344 Curran: Province of Cavite, For. Bur. 7671 Curran: Province of Batangas, For. Bur. 7737 Curran & Merritt. Porto, Bur. Sci. 10776 McGregor. Minvoro, For. Bur. 8613 Merritt. MIN- DANAO, Province of Surigao, Bolster 280: District of Davao, Copeland s. n., Williams 3058; District of Zamboanga, Copeland s. n., For. Bur. 9393 Whitford ¢& Hutchinson. Bastran, For. Bur. 3441 Hutchinson. Tawt Tawi, Bur. Sei. 10823 Foxworthy. Some of our specimens have been found along the seashore and some on dry ridges at some distance from the coast. It is possible that some of our material should be referred to C. rumphii Miq.; but I have been unable to find any sure means of distinguishing between the two. The species is very imperfectly under- stood and will repay further study. The seeds are poisonous when fresh; but, when thoroughly washed and cooked they furnish a sort of sago. This sago is used in the Batanes Islands north — of Luzon, The young leaves are said to be cooked and eaten for food in the Province of Bataan, Luzon. Native names: uliva, patubo. Distribution: Africa, Ceylon, British India, Burma, Sumatra, Java, Celebes, the Moluccas, New Guinea, China, ‘Japan, and the islands of the South Pacific. 3. Cycas sp. Plate XXVII. For. Bur, 3842 Curran, collected in Palawan in ey 1906, is a very curious form with leaves like (. circinalis and a very peculiar, slender staminate cone. — Probably a new species; but I do not feel warranted in describing it at the — present time. Cycas ? HyPoLEUcA Pres] in Epim. Bot. (1851) 238; F. Vill. Noviss. App- (1880) 212. This form is not properly referred to this genus. It is considered to be a palm. Class V. CONIFERAE. Stem branched. Vessels in secondary wood wanting. Leaves usually small, linear or lanceolate. Flowers monoecious, always borne on the upper side of a scale. Cotyledons 2-15, always free. Vascular bundles of stem and leaf collateral and endarch. Embryo attached to a pore fas : and embedded in endosperm. Fam. 1. Taxacear.' Ovules solitary or few, terminal, axillary oT attached singly to the upper surface of a simple sporophyll. Seed often ‘In this family, the deseriptions of genera and species have been taken laraely ‘ from Pilger’s monograph in Engler, Das Pflanzenreich 4.° ; PHILIPPINE GYMNOSPERMS. 158 with a fleshy aril. . Mesophyll of the leaves with resin-canals, except in Taxus. About 70 species in tropical and subtropical regions. Fam. II. Prnacear. Ovules associated in perfect cones; the seeds hidden between the scales till ripe; the testa woody or leathery, never fleshy ; aril never formed. Mesophyll of the leaves always with resin- canals. About 300 species, mostly in temperate regions. KEY TO PHILIPPINE GENERA OF TAXACEAE. a. True leayes reduced, phylloclades developed 3. Phyllocladus aa. Leaves truly foliaceous. b. Anther-cells 2; carpels l-ovuled; epimatium always developed. c. Epimatium free from the integ t 1. Dacrydium ce. Epimatium always grown together with base of carpel........ 2. Podocarpus bb. Anther cells 3-8; carpels bi-ovulate or reduced to a single terminal ovule on the squamate stem; epimatium wanting. Seed surrounded by an aril. 4, Taxus 1. DACRYDIUM Soland. Flowers dioecious, rarely monoecious. Staminate flowers terminal ; microsporophylls leaves, scarcely or not at all changed; apiculae large ; male flowers rarely densely imbricate, anthers borne at the base of squa- mate axillary scales in the manner of Podocarpus; cells always 2. Pistillate flowers terminal or rarely on short axillary branches; car- pidia 1-several, free; ovule single, epimatium and covering turned and affixed to the base; epimatium almost wholly covering the young ovule; young ovules more or less inverted, micropyle facing toward the base of the carpidium, falsely erect ; seeds surrounded by the base of the epima- tium; testa hard; integument of the ovule always free from the epima- tium, not connate with it. Trees or shrubs. Leaves rarely ovate-lan- ceolate and mostly small, squamniform or of different forms, in young state like linear leaves, in adult state trancformed into squamiform leaves. Sixteen species in the Malayan region, New Zealand, and Tasmania. KEY TO THE PHILIPPINE SPECIES, a. Leaves elongate, ovate-lanceolate, base FalOatenies ern iee- ete 1. D, faleiforme aa. Adult leaves squamiform or subulate. b. Adult leaves usually triangular in sectiOM....---------- bb. Adult leaves tetrangular in section... 2. D. elatum 3. D. sp. 1. Dacrydium falciforme (Parl.) Pilger in Engler Das Pflanzenreich 4° (1903) 45; Foxworthy ex Merrill in Philip. Journ. Sei. 2 (1907) Bot. 257. Plate XXVIII, fig. 1. : Podocdrpus faleiformie Parl, in DC. Prodr. 16° (1868) 685; Rendle in Journ. Bot. 34 (1896) 355; Warburg, Monsunia 1 (1900) 193. Nageia falciformis O, Ktze. Revis. Gen. Pl. 2 (1891) 800, Very distinet by virtue of its ovate-lanceolate falciform leaves. The Bornean form, as I have seen it, has usw) lly slightly larger leaves than the Philippine. — 154 / | = FOXWORTHY. ° Tree or shrub, branches: spreading; leaves’ subdistichous, coriaceous; rather broad, falcate, acuminate mucronate, base acuminate, 2-4 cm long, 6-8 mm broad, midrib obtuse evident. Staminate flowers were not found with the type material. Mr: Merrill collected material on Mount Halcon which shows one staminate cluster which is about 6 em long and 3 mm in diameter, terminal on a\short branch. Pis- tillate flowers on short branches 5-6 mm long; pistillate branches with numerous squamate, tenuous, spreading, imbricate, triangular, carinate scales, which are crowded together toward the upper end of the branch: ovule single, terminal. : First collected in the Philippines by Whitehead in 1895, on one of the shoulders of Mount Halcon, Mindoro, next collected by Mr. Merritt, For. Bur. 4425, June 1906 in fruit, and finally by Mr. Merrill 5744 in Nov. 1906. Mr. Merrill says that it was a tree about 12 m. tall, growing at an altitude of 1,800 m. The species is now known from the mountains of Poe, Santubong and Matang in Sarawak, where it occurs at altitudes of from 600 to 1,500em and on Mount Haleon, Mindoro. It is also known from Lingga (Teysmann 69). The tree has much the habit of a Podocarpus. The leaves on young plants are sometimes as much as 6 em long and are proportionately more slender, more lanceolate in shape than they are in adult material. 2. Dacrydium elatum (Roxb.) Wall. ex Hook. in Journ. Bot. 2 (1843) 144, t. 2; Blume, Rumphia 3 (1847) 221, ¢. 172 B, f. 1, t. 172 O, f. 2; De Boer, Conif. Archip. Ind. (1866) 29 (desecriptio valde extensa) ; Parl. in DC. Prodr. 16? (1868) 494; Hook. f. Fl. Brit. Ind. 5 (1896) 648; Rendle in Journ. Bot. 34 (1896) 355; Foxworthy ex Merrill in Philip. Journ. Sci. 2 (1907) Bot. 257; Pilger in Engler Das Pflanzenreich 4° (1903) 51. Juniperus elata Roxb. Fl. Ind. 3 (1832) 838. Juniperus rigida Sieb. & Zuce. FI. Jap. 2 (1842) 109, t. 125. Juniperus philippsiana Wall. ex Gord. Pin. (1858) 75. Sey Dacrydium junghuhnii Miq. Pl. Junghuhn. 1 (1851) 4; Fl. Ind. Bat. 2 (1859) — 1075. Tree 10-15 m tall; branches verticillate, the lower very long deflexed, the upper erect spreading, much branched. Juvenile leaves aciculate, subulate, more or less faleate and spreading, acute, subpungent, triangu- lar in section, 10-18 mm long; adult leaves densely clothing the branch- lets, gradually smaller, more rigid, less curved, stiff, squarrose-spread- ing, subulate or narrowly linear, inserted on a spreading and _ slightly decurrent base, shortly acute or rarely obtuse, often obscurely tetragonal in section, carinate without, the sides sulcate more or less impressed- notate, 5-7 to 9 mm long, these diverse forms connected by intermediate | forms; finally the leaves in the region of fruit, on stiff branches, erect, squamiform, densely imbricate, adpressed, rigid, triangular-ovate, apex slightly ineurved, rather obtuse, carinate on dorsal face, 1-1.5 mm long. Male inflorescence terminal, narrowly cylindrical, dense, 5-7 mm long; anthers usually apiculate, from a broadly triangular base acute; cells ?, | ovate-globose, dehiscing at the sides without. Female flowers at the apex PHILIPPINE GYMNOSPERMS. 155 of branchlets; ovule inverted. Seed finally erect, terminal or a little in- fraterminal, ovoid, obtuse, subtrigonous, micropyle apiculate. Minporo, Mount Halcon, For. Bur. 4419 M erritt, Merrill 5789; Mount Palong, For. Bur. 8527 Merritt.. Panay, Province of Antique, Mount Midiaas, Yoder s. n. Necros, Mount Silay, For. Bur, 4227 Everett, For, Bur. 4543 P. del Villar, For. Bur. 13612, 13621 Curran & Foxworthy. MrnpaNnao, Province of Misamis, Mount Malindang, For. Bur. 4547, 4548, 4781 Mearns & Hutchinson: District of Zam- boanga, Copeland s. n., probably this species although not a typical form. This is distinctly a plant of high elevations. All the above were found at 1,000 or more meters elevation. Where the tree oceurs, it is abundant, forming a large part of the stand. Distribution: Monsoon region; Burma; Siam and Cochin China; Tonkin, Than-Moi; Malacca, Singapore; Penang; Sumatra; Borneo; Fiji Islands; and the Philippines. : 3. Dacrydium sp. aff. D. beccarii Parl. Foxworthy in Philip. Journ. Sei. 2 (1907) 258. ro cae This form, with long, very slender, aciculate, 4-angled leaves is possibly a young form of D. elatum, although the very slender long leaves do not look like that species. Minvoro, Mount Halcon, at 2,400 m, Merrill 5714, Nov. 1906, a single sterile specimen from a young tree in a thicket on a ridge. 2, PODOCARPUS L’Herit.’ Dioecious or very rarely monoecious. Male flowers rarely terminal like those of Dacrydium and single or several together sessile or pedun- culate in the axils of leaves,-surrounded by the squamate sterile bases, sometimes aggregated or in an inflorescence at the apex of a shortened branch, rarely spicate (Stachycarpus) 5 anthers often imbricate, always composed of 2 cells, apiculus usually small... Female flowers rarely spic- ate, ovules remote (Stachycarpus), or rarely ovules 1 or 2 at the apex of a short, scarcely thickened branch ; flowers often single, pedunculate in the axils of leaves, receptacle fleshy and base squamate, in the fertile part com- posed of 1 or 2 carpidia; carpidia always uniovulate ; ovules and covering much exceeding the carpidia, rarely grown together with the carpidia at the apex (Dacrycarpus) ; epimatium smooth curved, with integument of the ovule inverted, the micropyle always facing the base of the connate carpidia. Seeds often large; often + apiculate, testa ‘double, involute, exteriorly fleshy or fleshy-coriaceous, inner layer thickly ligneous or scarcely different from the outer. Spreading shrubs or trees. Leaves rarely squamiform (Dacrycarpus), often linear or elongate, lanceolate or ovate, often acute or mucronate and usually spirally inserted, spreading, distichous, rarely opposite or subopposite (Nageia) - Of the five sections, of the genus as recognized by Pilger, four, are represented in the Philippines. 6... eo s found in eastern Asia and Malaya - Th x : di e genus contains about 60 species and i ssa te reach its and the temperate regions. of the southern hemisphere. 2 One of the nomina conservanda of the Vienna Congress. 156 FOXWORTHY. greatest development in the Malayan region. The Philippines, with eleven species, show a very rich representation of the genus. The Philippine species show the closest relationship to those of Borneo and Celebes. All our species except P. polystachyus are mountain, often high mountain, forms. P. polystachyus alone comes down to sea-level and is frequently found in rocky places at or near the beach. Natural reproduction seems to be easy in most places where representatives of this genus are found. In P. polystachyus, and possibly other species as well, the young seedlings show only 2 cotyledons. In some cases, the fleshy receptacle of the fruit is eaten; and there is a very limited use made of the wood. Aside from these, the members of the group are not used. : KEY TO PHILIPPINE SPECIES. a. Leaves dimorphous, very variable; larger leaves 13-17 mm long, smaller ones closely appressed, acuminate. (Sect. Dacrycarpus.) ......-..-..- 1. P. imbricatus aa. Leaves of one kind, linear, lanceolate or ovate. b. Leaves broad, lanceolate, opposite or subopposite. (Sect. Nageia.) 2. P. blumei bb. Leaves linear or lanceolate or elliptic, alternate. c. Receptacle not developed. (Sect. Stachycarpus.) d. Leaves green on both surfaces, more than 5 cm long; large trees. 3. P. amarus dd. Leaves glaucous beneath, less than 3 cm long; alpine shrubs. ; 4. P. glaucus ec. Receptacle developed, fleshy. (Seet. Eupodocarpus.) d. Leaves never long-attenuate in the upper part, lanceolate or elliptic- lanceolate. e. Leaves less than 5 cm long. f. Leaves acute or mucronulate at apex, 4-7 mm wide. 5. P. brevifolius ff. Leaves usually rounded or obtuse at apex, 10-12 mm wide. 6. P. pilgeri ee. Leaves 5 cm or more in ee f. Male catkins n ; iculate; sea-level forms. : Te polystachyus ff. Male catkins not fasticulate; mountain forms.............- 7. P. costalis dd. Leaves long-attenuate in the upper part. e. Upper half of leaf uniformly attenuated to the acute apex. 9. P. neriifolius ee. Leaves not so uniformly attenuated in the upper half. o f. Leaves narrow, gradually narrowed into petiole. : : 10. P. philippinensis ff. Leaves large, abruptly narrowed into petiole...........- 11. P. rumphii Section I. Dacrycarpus Endl. Much branched trees; leaves very small. Juvenile and adult foliage — very distinct. Male flowers terminal, anthers on leaves which are but slightly modified; apiculus large. Female flowers terminal; receptacle oe small, verruculose ; fertile carpidium single, connate with the ovule for — PHILIPPINE GYMNOSPERMS. 157 its whole length; ovule inverted. Seed small, broadly ovoid or ovoid- globose, adnate carpidium scarcely discernible in seed. 1. Podocarpus imbricatus Blume Enum. Pl. Javae (1827) 89; Pilger in Engler Dag Pflanzenreich 4° (1903) 56. P. cupressina R. Br. ex Mirb. Geogr. Conif. in Mém. Mus. 13 (1825) 75 (nomen !); Bennett in R. Br, Pl. Jay. Rar. 1 (1838) 35, t. 10; Blume Rumphia 3 (1847) 918, t. 172, f. 2 et 172B, f. 2; Endl. Syn. (1847) 222; De Boer, Conif. Archip. Ind. (1866) 25; Carr. Conif. 2 (1867) 677; Parl. in DC. Prodr. 16% (1868) 521; Miq. Fl. Ind. Bat. 2 (1859) 1074; Beceari, Malesia 1 (1878) 179; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 211; Vidal Sinopsis Atlas xliii, ¢. 97, f. B.;. Phan. Cum. Philip. (1885) 160; Rev. Pl. Vase. Filip. (1886) 295; Ceron Cat. Pl. Herb. (1892) 187; Warburg, Monsunia 1 (1900) 191; Koorders & Valeton, Bijd. Ken. Boomsoort. Java 10 (1904) 262; Koorders-Schumacher, Syst. Verz. Herb. Koord. 3 (1911) Taxaceae 3. ~P. cumingii Parl. in A. DO. Prodr. 16? (1868) 521. Nageia cumingii O. Ktze. Revis. Gen. Pl. 2 (1891) 800. P. horsfieldii Wall. Cat. n. 6049, Endl. 1. e. Taxodium horsfieldii Knight Syn. Conif. 21. Nageia cupressina O. Ktze. 1, c. 800. P. imbricatus Blume var. cwmingii (Parl.) Pilger 1. c. 56; Perk. Frag. Fl. Philip. (1904) 44; Foxworthy ex Merrill in Philip. Journ. Sci. 2 (1907) Bot. 258; Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sei. 5 (1910) Bot. 324. I can not see any way in ‘which the variety. cumingii is distinct from the species. This is the commonest and most widely distributed species of the family in the Philippines. It covers the tops of many of our mountains. Found at eleva- tions of from 900 to 2,700 m. Luzon, Subprovince of Bontoc, For. Bur. 14465. Darling, For. Bur. 10960 Curran: Subprovince of Lepanto, M errill 4503, 4546, For. Bur. 569 1, 5727 K yen, For, Bur. 14498 Darling: Province of Abra, For. Bur. 14584, 14589 Darling: Subprovince of Benguet, Hlmer 6550, 6551, Williams 1299, 1298, Bur. Sci. $409 Mearns, For. Bur. 5036, 10825, 10829 QGurran, For. Bur. 14187, 14190 Merritt, For. Bur. 18049 Curran, Merritt & Zschokke, For. Bur. 18365 Alvarez, Bur. Sci. 8328 Mctiregor: Province of Zambales, For. Bur. 8103 Curran & Merritt: Prov- inces of Laguna and Tayabas, Mount Banajao, Cuming 803, For. Bur. 213, 874 Klemme, Dec. Phil. For, Fl. 66 Klemme, For. Bur. 7886, 7905 Curran & Merritt, Whitford 951, Bur. Sci. 2387 Foeworthy, Bur. Sci. 6060, 6565 Robinson, Calvin 328, Loher 4852, 7137. Mxxvoro, For. Bur. 4446, 541, 8528, 8529 Merritt, Merrill 5563. PANAaY, Province of Antique, Yoder s. n- Neoros, Mount Canlaon, Merrill 7032. Minpanao, Province of Misamis, For. Bur. 4666 Mearns & Hutchin- son: District of Zamboanga, Copeland s. "- vee age Warburg, |. c. 192, mentions the occurrence of nodule-bearing ai s ee species. The Philippine material also shows these nodules on all the spec meee 00 m high and Distribution: Monsoon region: Java, on mountains from 1,000 m e si upward; west Sumatra; south Celebes; the Moluceas; south -— ey the Malay Peninsula; northern Burma; the Philippines; and New 5 cameean Section III. Nacera Endl. ovate or ovate-lanceolate, : : ite, often large, : Leaves opposite or subopposite, 8 " fasciculate on axillary midrib wanting. Male inflorescences often several 158 - *'.) -ROXWORTHY. peduncles. Female flowers with or without distinct receptacle, often single axillary; seeds globose, ‘rarely attenuate towards the base. 2. Podocarpus blumei Endl. Syn. (1847, Majo) 208; Parl.-in DC.. Prodr. 16* (1868) 508; Beccari, Malesia 1 (1877) 179; Pilger in Engler Das Pflanzen- reich 4° (1903) 60; Koorders, Meded. ’s Lands. Plant. 19 (1898) 264; Koorders & Valeton, Bijd. Ken. Boomsort. Java 10 (1904) 261; Merr. in Bur. Govt: Lab. Publ. (Philip.) 17 (1904) 5; Philip. Journ. Sci. 1 (1906). Suppl. 24; Foxworthy ex Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 2 (1907) Bot. 258; Koorders-Schmacher, Syst. Verz. Herb. Koord. 3 (1911) Taxaceae 2. Plate XXVIII, fig. 2. P. latifolia Blume Enum. Pl, Javae (1827) 89; De Boer, Conif. Archip. Ind. (1866) 12; C. B. Robinson in Bull. Torr. Bot. Club 35 (1908) 63, non Wall. Pl. As. Rar. (1830 !) P. agathifolia Blume Rumphia 3 (1847, Junio) 217, t. 173. Nageia blumei Gord. Pin. (1858) 135; Carr. Conif. (1867) 640. P. latifolia forma ternatensis De Boer 1. ¢. 14; forma luxurians. Usually small trees, much branched, 5-15 m tall, trunk erect, crown broad spreading; branches terete, spreading, fuscous, the ultimate op- posite, greenish ; buds coriaceous, acuminate. Leaves subopposite, thickly coriaceous, elliptic or elliptic-lanceolate, apex sharply turned rarely long acuminate, obtuse or rarely acute, base thick abruptly or gradually narrowed into the petiole, in drying striatulate, 9-13 cm long and to 4 em broad, rarely to 15-16 cm long and to 5 cm broad. Flowers dioecious ; male 3-7 aggregated fasciculately in pedunculate axillary very short cylindraceous clusters, to 1.5 cm long; anthers with short apiculus, broadish, sharply acute. Female flowers opposite, axillary, forming short branches ; peduncles 6 mm long; receptacle elongate cylindraceous, fleshy, bearing short, free, acute, persistent, squamiform leaf-blades ; seed globose dark green, testa double, exterior tenuous-coriaceous; interior osseous, fragile. Leaves usually much resembling those of Agathis alba; but with more acute apex. Trees much smaller than A. alba, usually not exceeding 10 or 15.m in height and 1 dm diam. A tree of the lower mountain ridges. Very local in distribution. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur. 16738, 17200 Curran: Province of - Bataan, Copeland 244, Williams 399, 753, 1035, For. Bur. ‘1}7, 19} Barnes, Whitford 1353, For. Bur. 1716 Curran. Minporo, Merrill 5728. This last number is from young sterile shoots and looks surprisingly like young Agathis material; but, I have placed it here because all the leaves taper to an acute tip. Distribution: Monsoon region: Java, in the mountains of the western part of the island; Moluccas, Ternate; Celebes; New Guinea; Philippines. Sect. IV. Stachycarpus Endl. . Male flowers arranged in terminal spikes which are single or several in the axils of bracts, or single or several in the axils of leaves, rarely several, fasciculate at the apex of a peduncle. Female flowers spicate ’ forming woody branches or on twigs which are leafy at the base; ovules several, scattered, or ovules 1 or 2 at the apex of twigs which are leafy, . PHILIPPINE: GYMNOSPERMS. 159 or squamate at the base, woody, scarcely thickened at the apex; carpidia always small. Seeds and seed-coats large, testa double, interior thick, hard, woody. Spreading trees, often of great size. Leaves small, linear, , _ or elongate, lanceolate, biseriate in one-plane or slightly twisted. 3. Podocarpus amarus Blume Enum. Pl. Javae (1827) 88, et Rumphia 3 (1847) 213, t. 170; Endl. Syn. (1847) 217; Mig. Fl. Ind. Bat. 2 (1859) 1073; De Boer, Conif. Archip. Ind. (1866) 20; Carr. Conif. (1867) 667; Parl. in DC. Prodr. 162 (1868) 516; Warburg, Monsunia 1 (1900) 192; Pilger in Engler Das Pflanzenreich 4° (1903) 68. Koorders & Valeton, Bijd. Ken. Boomsort. Jaya 10 (1904) 263; Foxworthy ex Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 2. (1907) Bot. 258; Koorders-Schumacher, Syst. Verz. Herb. Koord. 3 (1911) Taxaceae 1. ; P. sprengelii Blume in Flora (1824) 292 (nomen). P P. ewryncha Mig. 1. ¢. 1074; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 211; De Boer, 1. ¢. 24. P. dulcamara Seem. in Bonplandia 9 (1861) 293; 410 (1862) 365. P. pedunculata Bailey in Queensland Agric. Journ. 5+ (1899) 390, 404, ¢. 149; Queensland Fl. 5 (1902) 1498. : Leaves spirally inserted, elongate, lanceolate or linear-lanceolate, sub- caudate-acuminate, midrib depressed above. — Ovules in flower usually 1, rarely 2. Male flowers several, fasciculate at the apex of axillary pedun- cles, Leaves 6-10 cm long, and 7-9 mm broad, rarely to 16 cm long and 12-18 mm broad. : Female flowers on short axillary branches 3-5 em long, squamae rudimentary, arranged decurrently on the branch; these squamae or half scars clustered at the base of the branch, more distant above; the uppermost squamiform leaves 2 or 3 at the apex of small distant branches, very: short, forming: broadly obtuse carpidia ; ovules elliptic, apex slightly attenuate. Seeds subglobose, gibbous, slightly extra-apical, obtuse, 2.5-3 cm long, testa double, the outer coria- ceous-fleshy, 3-4 mm thick, the inner hard woody, 1.5-2 mm. thick. Luzon, Subprovince of Lepanto, For. Bur, 10951 Curran: Subprovinee of Benguet, For. Bur. 10895 Curran, For. Bur, 18029 Merritt, For. Bur. 18356 Alva- rez. Mrnporo, Merrill 5703. : Distribution: Monsoon region and eastern Aus tralia: Java; Sumatra; Philip- pines; Queensland. 4. Podocarpus glaucus Foxworthy i Plate XXIX, fig. 1. A small tree 5-6 m tall, much branched, the branches terete, a brous, gray or yellowish, branchlets very numerous, short, crowded towar the end of the branches. Leaves crowded toward the ends of the twigs, i i yposi of their con- erect-spreading, often appearing subopposite on account of t : a . shining, paler beneath and the tiguity, coriaceous, glabrous, smooth, auie younger ones very glaucous, oblong, elliptic-oblong or spatulate, ae mm long, 3.5-5.5 mm wide, the apex rounded or ‘obtuse, the base grac- ually narrowed and somewhat decurrent, midrib not prominent want very prominent beneath, margins thickened ; petioles broad, 5 ee long. Staminate spikes solitary in the upper leaf-axils, few, cylindrical, n Philip. Journ, Sei. 2 (1907) Bot. 258. 160 — _ FOXWORTHY. 1-1.5 em long, 3 mm in dianieter, densely many-flowered, glaucous when young. Pistillate flowers and fruit not seen. Mrnporo, Mount Haleon, Merrill 5672, Nov. 1906. Borders of thickets on the margins of open heaths at 2,400 m altitude. Sect. V. Eupopocarreus Endl. Male flowers single or several, axillary, sessile, or several fasciculate at the apex of a peduncle, or disposed in an inflorescence ; anthers usually densely imbricate, apiculus rarely wanting, usually + developed. Fe- male flowers single, axillary, subsessile or usually long-pedunculate ; receptacle fleshy, always distinctly developed, often with 2 narrow bracts at the base; ovules 1 or 2. Seeds ovoid or globose, often with the apex obtusely produced; testa with its inner coat slightly thickened, never thickly woody. Leaves scattered, linear or lanceolate, often quite elon- gate. 5. Podocarpus brevifolius (Stapf) Foxworthy comb. nov. P. neriifolius Don var. brevifolia Stapf in Trans. Linn. Soc. Bot, II 4 (1894) 249; Pilger ]. c. 93. Plate XXIX, fig, 2. Small trees of the upper part of the mossy forest. Leaves densely crowded on the twigs, 1.2-3.5 em long, 4-7 mm wide, elliptic with slightly thickened margins, acute at apex, base gradually narrowed, midrib distinct above and below. Collected by Low and by Haviland at altitudes of from 3,330 to 3,630 m above sea level on Mt. Kinabalu in British North Borneo. Dr. Stapf thought it possibly an alpine form of P. polystachyus R. Br. Pilger, 1. ¢. 93, thought it probably a distinct species. Dr. Stapf has kindly sent me fragments of the Kinabalu material and I am convinced that it is a distinct species of § Eupodocarpus and closely related to P. pilgeri. This species has been collected twice in the island of Luzon. Both collections were made in December 1907 on Mt. Tapulao, Zambales. For. Bur. 9511, col- lected by Curran and Merritt, seems to match the type pretty closely. Bur. Sci. 5002, collected by Ramos, differs in having slightly longer leaves. Both collec- tions were from an elevation of about 1,800 m above sea level. ; 6. Podocarpus pilgeri Foxworthy in Philip, Journ. Sei. 2 (1907) Bot. 259. P. celebicus Warburg, Monsunia 1 (1900) 192; Pilger 1. c. 78, non P. celebicus Hemsl. in Kew Bull. (1896) 39. Small trees in the mossy forest of mountain tops. Branches few or opposite, short, spreading, quite densely foliate; bud-scales ovate- lanceolate, acute or the outer ones long-acuminate. Leaves spreading, coriaceous, nitidulous, narrowly to broadly elliptic, apex abruptly rounded, obtuse or very shortly obtuse-mucronulate, abruptly narrowed below into the petiole, 3.5-5.5 em long, 10-12 mm broad, midrib narrowly obtusely prominent above, broad and prominent below. Staminate flowers un-— PHILIPPINE GYMNOSPERMS. 161 known. Fruit ovoid, 8-10 mm long, on a fleshy receptacle which has two minute subulate bracts at the base. Minporo, Mount Halcon, at 2,150 m alt., Merrill 5754, Nov. 1906: Negros, Mount Canlaon, at 1,450 m alt., Phil. Pl. 241 Merrill, Apr. 1910. MINDANAO, Mount Malindang, at 2,790 m alt., For. Bur. 4673 Mearns & Hutchinson, May 1906. First collected by Warburg in the mountain forest on Wawo-Kraeng in Celebes. 7. Podocarpus costalis ©. Pres! Epimel. Bot. (1851) 236 pro parte (Spec. Haenke) excl. syn. Brown et Blume et Cuming 803; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 211; Mig. Fl. Ind. Bat. 2 (1859) 1074; Ceron Cat. Pl. Herb. (1892) 187; Warburg, Monsunia 1 (1900) 193; Pilger in Engler Das Pflanzenreich 4* (1903) 78. ; P. sp. aff. costalis Presl; Vidal Sinopsis Atlas (1883) xliii, t. 97, f. D. Tree, 5-15 m tall. Branches few, short, spreading, densely leafy above. Leaves turned in all directions, spreading or erect-spreading, coriaceous, narrow or broadly linear-lanceolate, of uniform width almost to the apex, which is abruptly rounded, obtuse, gradually changing at the base into: the short rather broad petiole, shining above, on drying ++ fuscous above and below, 5-7 cm long, 10-12 mm _ broad or 3-4.5 em long and about 6 mm broad or much larger in leaves from robust seedling plants, midrib scarcely conspicuous above or in a broadish, irregular obtuse ++ prominent furrow, beneath broadly marked, but scarcely or but little prominent, irregularly slightly impressed in drying. Male inflorescence single, sessile, thick, cylindraceous, base surrounded by a rigid, short, obtusely-rounded bract, 3 em long. Female inflorescence single, axillary; peduncles about 2 mm long; receptacle fleshy, scales 2, subequal, connate at apex, forming a fleshy rounded apex, about 7 mm long, with 2 very small bracts at the base. Seed elliptical, apex slightly obtusely produced, in drying fusco-nigrescent, 9-10 mm long. 5 Known only from the Philippines. First collected by Haenke, probably on Mt. Banajao, in the island of Luzon, from which come all the other collections of this species, Loher 2140, 7128, 1906; Bur. Sci. 2393, 2423 Foxworthy, Mar. 1907, For, Bur. 7913 Curran & Merritt, Nov. 1907. 8. Podocarpus polystachyus R. Br. ex Mirb. in Mém. Mus. 3 (1825) 75 Vidkrisis) et éx ‘Dennsel in Hoek Pl.Tak, Rav: (1608), 00 tacmen | ° Endl. Syn. (1847) 215; Carr. Conif. (1867) 662 (7); Parl. in DC. Prodr. 16? (1868) 515; Merr. in Philip, Journ. Sci. 3 (1908) Bot. 394; Pilger in Engler Das _ Pflanzenreich 4° (1903) 79. P. neriifolia Don p. parte in Lamb. Pin. ed. 2, 2 (1828) 122. I can not be sure that this species is distinct from P. elatus R. Br. The following description is taken from Pilger, with the exception of what is said concerning the seed, which is taken from our Palawan material. . « 162 1... FOXWORTHY:, : Tree; branches many subverticellate, erect-spreading, densely leaved toward the apex; bud-scales narrow, rigid, acuminate. ‘Leaves rigid coriaceous, shining above, narrowly lanceolate or lanceolate, apex abruptly ‘narrowed, obtusish or acute, or long-acuminate, acute, narrowed at the ‘base into a short petiole, 4-7 em long, 5-9, rarely 11-12 mm broad, middle portion usually slightly plicate above on drying, midrib narrow and prominent above, below broadish scarcely prominent. Male catkins several (3-5) fasciculate-sessile, surrounded at the base by small broad scales, spreading, + curved, 2.5-3 cm long; anthers apiculate, broadly triangular-ovate, acutish or obtuse, slightly lacerate. Female flowers single; peduncles 3 to 6-¥ mm long; receptacle fleshy, squamae 2, quite connate, apex very short, acute, fleshy, free, 10 mm long, 2-3 mm broad, upper squama forming a long carpidium; receptacle with 2 caducous scales at the base, tenuous, subulate; ovule ovoid, apex slightly obtusely produced. Mature seed more or less globose, about 10 mm in diameter. All of our material is from female plants or sterile. BaTANES ISLANDS, Bur. Sci. 3586 Fénix, May 1907. Luzon, Province of Tayabas, Bur. Sci. 13202 Foxworthy & Ramos, Mar. 1911. Bucas Istanp, Merrill 5268, Oct. 1906. Pa- LAWAN, Vidal 3911, For. Bur. 3854 Curran, Mar. 1906, Bur. Sci. 904 Foawworthy, May 1906. ; This tree is found in rocky places on the beach or in rocky river beds not much above sea level. It is the only representative of the family found at sea level in the Philippines. I collected this same form on the rocky beach of the Island of Satang Basa, just off the coast’ of Sarawak in June 1908 (Foxworthy 417). Monsoon region: Singapore; Sumatra; Java; Borneo; and the Philippines. 9. Podocarpus neriifolius Don in Lamb. Pin. (1824) 21; ed. 2, 2 (1828) 122 ex parte (inclusus P. polystachyo et P. rumphii !); Spreng. Syst. Veg. 3 (1826) 889; Endl. Syn. (1847) 215; Carr. Conif. (1867) 661; Parl. in DC. Prodr. 16* (1868) 514; Bot. Mag. ¢. 4655; Brandis, For. Fl. (1874) 5413 Hook. f. Fl. Brit. Ind. 5 (1888) 649 (excl. syn. P. polystachya); Forbes & Hemsl. in Journ. Linn. Soe. Bot. 26 (1902) 548; Perk. Frag. Fl. Philip. (1904) 44; Pilger in Engler Das Pflanzenreich 4* (1903) 80; Koorders & Valeton, Bijd. Ken. Boomsort. Java 10 (1904) 265; Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 1 (1906) Suppl. 24; Foxworthy ex Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 2 (1907) Bot. 258; Koorders-Schumacher, Syst. Verz. Herb. Koord. 3 (1911) Taxaceae 4. P. bracteata Blume Enum. Pl. Jay. (1827-28) 88; Rumphia 3 (1847) 214, t, 172, f. 1; De Boer, Conif. Archip. Ind. (1866) 16. P. neglecta Blume Rumphia 3 (1847) 213; De Boer l. c. 21. P. junghuhniana Mig. Pl. Jungh. 1 (1851) 2; Vidal Sinopsis Atlas (1883) xliii, t. 97, f. C. P. leptostachya Blume Rumphia 3 (1847) 214; De Boer I. ¢. 19. P. discolor Blume Rumphia 3 (1847) 213; De Boer 1. ¢. 23. » P. macrophylla var. acuminatissima Pritzel in Engl. Bot. Jahrb. 29 (1900) 213. Nageia neriifolia 0. Ktze. Revis. Gen. Pl. 2 (1891) 800. . Tree to 25 m tall; very much branched with wide-spreading branches; buds ovoid with coriaceous scales, which are long ovate-acute or long caudate-acuminate. Leaves scattered, approximating verticillate, spread- PHILIPPINE. GYMNOSPERMS. 163 4 ing, coriaceous, often + falcate, lanceolate or narrowly lanceolate, up- wardly distinctly narrowed, 7-15 cm long and 9-13 mm broad, in young specimens to 25 cm long .and to 17-19. mm broad, midrib prominent above in a narrow. furrow, below, broadish, prominent. Male catkins narrowly cylindrical, 2.5-5 em long, especially spreading or pendulous, single or 2 or 3 fasciculate, sessile, surrounded at base by numerous rigid, thick, coriaceous, or upwardly more tenuous, broad, obtuse or acute scales ; anthers narrowly apiculate, short, acute or obtusish.. Female flowers solitary ; peduncles 12-20 mm long; receptacle fleshy, scales 2 unequally long, connate, apex obtuse fleshy, acutish, 9 mm long, 3 mm broad, 2 subulate bracts at base, tenuous, deciduous, to 5 mm or more in length ; ovule single, ovoid, apex slightly obtusely, produced. Seeds 12-16 mm long, narrowly ovoid, upwardly slightly attenuate, rotundate, slightly inequilateral, testa thick, coriaceous-fleshy, integument and epimatium ‘equally developed ; receptacle dilated beneath the seed, broadly eylin- drical, 11 mm long, 9 mm broad. Luzon, Province of Tayabas, Merrill 1992, Hagger, April 1903: PotILLo, Bur. Sci. 10779 Mc@regor, Nov. 1909. Mrnporo, Merrill 5768, Nov. 1906. Var. brevipes Blume l. ec. Leaves narrower and thicker. Peduncle of female flower equaling the length of the receptacle. Seed ellipsoid-globose. The following numbers are of rather doubtful determination; but I am placing them here for the present. : : Luzon, Province of Abra, Bur. Sci. 7286 Ramos: Subprovince of Benguet, Loher s, n., For. Bur. 10826, 10894 Curran, For. Bur. 14189 Merritt, For. Bur. 14422 Darling. Mrnvoro, Merrill 5615, For. Bur. 11403 Merritt. All of our material has been collected in the mountains. —_. , Distribution: Monsoon region and central Asiatic region: Nepal; Khasia; Jowai; China; Java; Sumatra; Borneo; Celebes; Moluccas; New Guinea; Malay Peninsula; Philippines. 10. Podocarpus philippinensis sp. nov. Plate XXX. ie Arbor 20-30 m alta, cortice plano; rami erecti, teretiusculi ; gem- mae ramulorum globosae perulis ovatis, erassis, acutiusculis. Folia erecta vel erecto-patentia, coriacea, lanceolata, recta vel subfaleata, su- perne acuta, inferne sensim in petiolum brevem, crassiusculum angus- tata, 13-17 cm longa, 9-18 mm lata. Flores masculi ignoti. Flores feminei solitarii; pedunculus 5-8 mm longus; receptaculum carnosum, squamis 3 efformatum. Semina ellipsoidea-globosa, glauca. j Large straight trees, 20-30.m tall, with smooth reddish-brown flaky bark.’ Leaves long, linear-lanceolate, acute, more or less abrup tly nar: rowed to the base, 13-17 em long, 9-18 mm wide. Staminate flowers unknown. Fruit on a slender peduncle 5-8 mm long, two minute bracts at base of receptacle. Receptacle swollen, fleshy, bright-red, sometimes eaten, sometimes wider than the fruit when fresh, when dry 8-10 mm 164 ‘FOXWORTHY. long and 4-8 mm thick, of a dull brownish or dark-blue color, made wp of three scales which are found to contain some resin when dry. Seed globose, fleshy, 13-15 mm long, glaucous, with a thin hard shell. IT am not at all sure that this form is distinct from P. rumphii; but the description of that species is so unsatisfactory that it has seemed best to describe this as a new species. It seems to differ from P. rum- phii in its bark and shorter peduncles and in having a rather more gradual narrowing of the leaf-blade toward the petiole. i A tree that is found on lower ridges of some of our mountains from 300 to 800 meters above sea level. Luzon, Province of Bataan, Limay Peak, Bur. Sci. 5174 Foxworthy & Whitford, Apr. 1908 (type), Bur. Sci. 10844 Foxworthy, Nov. 1909, For. Bur. 17523 Curran, Nov. 1909, For. Bur. 17594 Curran, Dec. 1909; slopes of Mt. Mariveles, For. Bur. 6325, 6326 Ourran, Feb. 1907; For. Bur. 7512 Curran, Sept. 1907; For. Bur. 8987 Curran, Jan. 1908, Bur. Sci. 1660 Foaworthy, Oct. 1906, Whitford s. n, Apr. 1905, For. Bur. 2743 Borden, Mar. 1905: Province of Pampanga, Mt. Arayat, For, Bur. 17664, 17723 Curran, Mar. 1910. Some of these forms have distinctly wider leaves than the rest; but I can see no other difference and can see no reason for putting them in more than one species. 11. Podocarpus rumphii Blume Rumphia 3 (1847) 214; De Boer, Conif. Archip. Ind. (1866) 15; Carr. Conif. (1867) 663; Parl. in DC. Prodr. 167 (1868) 515; Beccari, Malesia 1 (1878) 179; Warburg, Monsunia 1 (1900) 192; Pilger in Engler Das Pflanzenreich 4° (1903) 81; Foxworthy ex Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 2 (1907) Bot. 258. Lignum emamum Rumphius, Herb. Amb. 4 (1744) 47, t. 26. Tree 20-25 m tall, crown pyramidal, bark fissured ; branches erect, terete; buds of twigs globose, with ovate scales, acutish. Leaves erect or erect-spreading, coriaceous, lanceolate, straight or subfalcate, upwardly shortly narrowed and + subcaudate-acuminate, rarely almost uniformly long-acuminate, acute, below abruptly narrowed into a short thick petiole, 15-25 em long, 15-29 mm broad, midrib obtusely prominent | above, the middle line more elevated, acutely marked, below broad, + prominent. Male flowers unknown. Female flowers solitary ; peduncle 2.5 em long, receptacle fleshy, composed of 3 scales. Seeds 1 or 2, ellip- soid-globose, greenish when immature, chalybeous when mature. Luzon, Province of Bataan, For. Bur. 6537 Curran, Apr. 1907: Province of Pampanga, Merrill 3917, Oct. 1904. Muixporo, For, Bur. 6790 Merritt, Apt 1907, Merrill 5553, Nov. 1906. 5 Monsoon region: New Guinea; Moluccas; Celebes; Philippines. PHYLLOCLADUS * L. C. & A. Rich. 3 Flowers monoecious or dioecious. Male flowers cylindraceous, pedi- cellate, fasciculate at the apex of a branch; anther-cells 2, dehiscent by a longitudinal fissure, apiculus small. Female flowers single in the — *One of the nomina conservanda of the Vienna Congress. PHILIPPINE. GYMNOSPERMS. 165 axils of scales at the base of undeveloped branches, back of excrescences, pedicellate, or sessile on phylloclades or occupying cavities in phyllo- clades; carpidia uniovulate decussate or spirally arranged, thick, apex truncate, forming with the fleshy axis hollows of the shape of the ovules; ovules erect, the base at last surrounded by a lobulate, white cupule equaling the seed or surpassing the smaller seeds. Leaves very short - squamiform, spirally arranged on the branches, in the axils of terminal branchlets resembling leaves, i. e. phyllocladia, rudimentary leaves ar- ranged on the margins, the upper part variously lobed, pitted. There are 5 or 6 species in the genus and one of these is found in the high mountains of the Philippines.’ Phyllocladus protractus (Warb.) Pilger in Engler Das Pflanzenreich 4° (1903) 99; Perk. Frag. Fl. Philip. (1904) 44; Foxworthy ex Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 2 (1907) Bot. 259. Plate XXXI. P. hypophyllus Rendle in Journ. Bot. 34 (1896) 355 non Hook. f. in Hook. Teon. Pl. (1852) t. 889. P. hypophyllus var. protracta Warb. Monsunia 1 (1900) 194. Buds of branches globose, inner scales imbricate, shortly acute, outer scales long, subulate-acuminate, divaricate, rarely all shortly acute. Leaves on the branches at the base of the phylloclades, squamiform, deciduous, linear, very small. Phylloclades rather distant, large, nar- rowly elliptic or ovate, apex long attenuate, shining above, below slightly fuscescent, cuneate narrowed from about one-third the length to the base, or base almost ovate-rounded, the upper part with dentate lobes, the apex itself obtuse deeply incised, terminal lobe narrow, elongate, obtuse, or deeply sinuate, rarely irregularly grossly crenate; lobes of phylloclades slightly crenulate, bearing setaceous-dentiform, acute, rudi- mentary leaves; phylloclades 4-6 to 10.5 cm long, up to 4 em broad; midrib prominent above, the place of lateral nerves taken by narrow furrows. Male catkins 5-7 mm long and 2? mm in diameter on pedicels of about the same length or shorter. Female flowers in sinuses at the apex of the phylloclades or at the sides or even taking the place of the phylloclades at the end of a branch; flowers subglobose, carpidia few. Seed smooth, compressed, with acute margins, apex rounded, obtuse ; cupule short, white, shorter than the seed, scarcely projecting beyond the carpel. Luzon, Province of Isabela, For. Bur. 18567 Alwarez: Subprovinee of Lepanto, For. Bur. 10957 Curran, Jan. 1909, with flowers: Province of Abra, For. Bur. 14587 Darling: Subprovince of Benguet, Loher 5203, Merrill 4753, For. Bur. 18364 Alvarez, Jan. 1909, in fruit. Mrnporo, Merrill 5788. MINDANAO, Province of Misamis, For. Bur. 4679 Mearns & Hutchinson. Found in all the above cases at elevations greater than 1,000 m. This species is said to differ from P. hypophyllus by its more incised phyllo- clades and by the fact that it is never glaucous on the under side of the phylloclades. Distribution: Monsoon region: Philippines; Moluceas ; 1026013 British New Guinea. 166 - | FOXWORTHY. 4. TAXUS L. Flowers dioecious; male axillary, squamate at the base; anthers 6-14, peltate, 6-8 cells together with connate filaments. Female flowers axil- lary on squamate branchlets; flower located in the axil of the uppermost scale, involucre of three equal decussate scales; buds containing 1-3 rudimentary leaves, rarely in flowering projecting from the next to the last scale of the twig; single ovule in terminal flower erect ; seed ellip- soid, testa woody, cupule campanulate, closed, red, thickly fleshy ; embryo placed in the upper part of the albumen, cotyledons 2, thick, pressed together. Trees or very much branched shrubs; leaves linear, spirally inserted, biseriate-spreading. ; Pilger recognizes only a single species; but it seems to me that his subspecies are really good species and I am so treating them. Taxus wallichiana Zuce. in Abh. Bayr. Akad. Wiss. 3 (1843) 803, ¢. 5; Endl. Syn. (1847) 244; Carr. Conif. (1867) 740. T. baceata subsp. wallichiana (Zuce.) Pilger in Engler Das Pflanzenreich 4* (1903) 112; Perk. Frag. Fl. Philip. (1904) 44; Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 5 (1910) Bot. 324, T. virgata Wall. ex Hook, f. Fl. Brit. Ind. 5 (1888) 648. T. contortus (?) Griff. Not. (1848) 351; Icon. Pl. As. t, 376. T. baccata Hook. f. Fl. Brit. Ind. 1. ¢. , Cephalotarzus sumatrana Mig. Fl. Ind. Bat. 2 (1859) 1076. Cephalotaxus celebica Warb. Monsunia 1 (1900) 194. Branches laxly leafy; scales of buds at the base of persistent branch- lets larger, more rigid and more acute than in T. baccata. ‘Leaves more or less faleate, narrowly linear, and base usually strongly curved, apex twisted, gradually long-acuminate, acute, 2.5-3 cm or more long, rarely in flowering specimens less than 2 cm. Luzon, Subprovince of Lepanto, Merrill 4595, Micholitz s. n., For. Bur. 10958 Curran: Subproyince of Benguet, Loher 4850, Elmer 6244, Williams 1002, Merrill 4814, For, Bur. 5015, 10824, 10830 Curran, Mearns s. n., Bur. Sci. 4406 Mearns, For. Bur. 14186, 14191 Merritt, For. Bur. 18106 Ourran, Merritt, & Zschokke, For, Bur. 18366, 18369 Alwarez, Bur. Sci. 8390 M. cGregor: Provinces of La Laguna and Tayabas, Mount Banajao, Vidal 3907 Loher 7129, 7139, Bur. Sci. 2431 Foxworthy, For, Bur. 7914 Curran & Merritt, Bur. Sci. 6059, 9823 Robinson, Calvin 315. Rendle‘ credited a sterile specimen collected by Whitehead in the highlands of Lepanto to Cephalotaxus mannii Hook. f., but later it was referred to this species. os All of our material has been collected at elevations in excess of 1,500 m. Where this species occurs, it makes up a very considerable part of the stand. Distribution: Sikkim ; Darjeeling; Manipur; Khasia; Burma; Sumatra; South Celebes; Philippines. ‘ pee ; “Journ, Bot. 34 (1896) 355. r PHILIPPINE GYMNOSPERMS. 167 PINACEAE. This family is represented, in the Philippines, by but two genera, which are readily distinguished as follows: Branchlets of but one sort; leaves broad and alternate or opposite........ 1. Agathis Branchlets of two sorts; leaves cylindrical and clustered in a sheath........ 2. Pinus 1. AGATHIS Salisb.° Flowers dioecious, rarely monoecious, axillary or the pistillate ter- minal. Staminate flower-clusters oval-lanceolate; stamens numerous, with 5-15 rather long pollen-sacs, and broad, oval, terminal scales. Cones crowded, spherical-ovoid, finally deciduous; receptacle broadly scale- shaped, leathery, imbricate. Seeds free, winged on one or both sides; cotyledons 2. Large evergreen resinous trees. Leaves on the main axis turned in all directions, on the twigs more or less in two planes and often opposed in pairs, broad, smooth, drawn together at the base to form a petiole, leathery, with numerous fine longitudinal nerves. Buds scaly. Time of ripening of fruit 2 years. About 4-6 species in the Hast Indies, Malay Islands, the Philippines, Fiji, New Zealand, and northeastern Australia. Agathis alba (Lam.) Foxworthy in Philip. Journ. Sci. 5 (1910) A, 173; Jeffrey in Ann. Bot. 20 (1906) 387 (nomen); Whitford, Philip. For. Bur. Bull. 10 part 2 (1911) 25, pl. 1; Koorders-Schumacher, Syst. Verz. Herb. Koord. 3 (1911) Pinaceae [1.] Dammara alba Rumphius in Herb. Amb. 2 (1741) 174, pl. 975 Lamarck, Eneyel. 2 (1786) 259; Blume, Rumphia 3 (1847) 211; Miq. Fl. Ind. Bat. 2 (1859) 1070; Parl. in DC. Prodr. 16? (1868) 374; Beccari, Malesia 1 (1879) 180. Pinus abies Lour. Fl. Cochinch. ed. Willd. (1793) 579. Agathis loranthifolia Salisb. in Trans. Linn. Soe. Bot. 8 (1807) 311; Blanco Fl. Filip. ed. 2 (1845) 528, ed. 3 (1879) 170; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1883) 211; Vidal Sinopsis Atlas (1883) xlii, pl. 98, f. A; Rev. Pl. Vase. Filip. (1886) 295; Phan. Cum. Philip. (1885) 160; Ceron Cat. Pl. Herb. (1892) 188; Ahern Imp. Phil. Woods (1901) 7; Merr. in Philip. Bur. Govt. Lab. Publ. 27 (1905) 82. Abies dammara Poir. Encye. Suppl. 5 (1817) 35. Dammara orientalis spall rae ed. 2 (1824) 70; Endl. Conif. (1847) Si Carr. Conif, (1853) 425; Gord. Pinet. (1858) 79; Henk. et Hochst. Nadelhilz. (1865) 210. - a. dammara Rich. Commentatio bot. de Coniferis et Cycadeis (1826) 83, t. 19; Kichler in E. & Pr. Pflanzenfam. 2* (1889) 67, f. 25. Dammara rumphii Pres] Epim. Bot. (1851) 236. ae Podocarpus phillippeanus Benth. ex Parl. in DC. Prodr. 167 (1868) 375. : Agathis philippinensis Warb. Monsunia 1 (1900) 185; Perk. tin 0 Fh: me (1904) 36; Merr, in Philip. Journ. Sci. 1 (1906) Suppl. 24; Philip, fours. Pe: 2 (1907) Bot. 257. *One of the nomina conservanda of the Vienna Congress. 168 _ FOXWORTHY. Dammara celebica Koord. in Meded. ’s Lands Plant. 19 (1898) 263. Agathis borneensis Warb. 1. c. 184. A, beccarit Warb. 1. ¢. 184. A, celebica (Koord.) Warb. 1. ¢. 185. A, macrostachys Warb. 1. c. 185. Very large trees, up to 50-60 m in height and more than 2 m diame- ter, with a clear length, sometimes, of as much as 30 m. This is easily the largest tree in the Islands. It occurs gregariously in the mountain forests at elevations of from 200 to 2,000 m, attaining its best develop- ment in the Philippines on well-drained slopes at 600—1,500 m. The bark is rather smooth, of a grayish color, 1-1.5 cm thick and contains numerous longitudinal resin-cavities. Resin collects on the sur- face of fresh cuts, and hard resin is found in masses wherever there is an old wound on the tree, often in the forks of the lowermost branches and sometimes also in the roots and the ground at the base of the tree. This resin is collected and exported as the Manila copal of commerce. Leaves thickly coriaceous, of the same color on both surfaces, light- green, without distinct midrib, elliptié, oblong, or lanceolate, usually rounded or obtuse at apex, but sometimes even acute, narrowed abruptly below into a short petiole, with numerous fine, parallel, longitudinal veins ; 3-10 em long or even longer on seedlings or young shoots, 1-4 em wide or less than 1 em wide on old or fruiting branches. On seed- lings and young shoots the leaves are often distinctly lanceolate, some- times acute at apex and relatively quite large ; on old branches or fruiting branches the leaves are much smaller and are often elliptic or oblong and distinctly obtuse or rounded at the apex. There is a great range of © variation and all intermediate forms are found between the two extremes noted. The staminate flower-clusters are more or less elliptic-oblong, of Micceirban size, up to 4-5 em long and 1-1.5 cm in diameter, and are borne in the axils of the leaves, The pistillate flowers are in ellipsoid-globose cones which are borne on short stout branches. 'The cones take 2 years to come to maturity. They are often of a purplish color and may be as much as 4-5 em in diameter during their first year, reaching @ diameter of 10 em or more when mature. The seeds may be found with or without wings. : Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur, 17183 Curran: Subprovince of Lepanto, For. Bur. 5670 Klemme: Province of Abra, For, Bur, 14599 Darling: Subprovince of Benguet, For. Bur. 10855 Curran, For. Bur. 14196, 18018 Merritt: Province of Nueva Ecija, For, Bur. 22181 Alvarez: Province of Zambales, For. Bur. 7009 Curran, For. Bur. 9508 Curran & Merritt: Province of Bataan, Williams 398; 755, Merrill $759, Whitford 240, 297, For. Bur. 736, 805 Borden, Dec. Phil. For. Fl. 163 Borden, Bur. Sci. 1664 Fowworthy, For. Bur. 12901 Alvarez: Province of Rizal, Loher 7127: Province of Camarines, For. Bur, 10465 Ourran, For. Bur. 14278 Aguilar: Province of Albay, Cuming 906, For. Bur, 6685 Pray: Province of Sorsogon, For. Bur. 668} Pray, For. Bur. 10602 Curran, Muxporo, For. Bur. 8748, 11480 Merritt. Stevan, MoGregor #. n. Nanos, Province of Negros PHILIPPINE GYMNOSPERMS. 169 Occidental, For. Bur. 3234 Burgess, For. Bur. 4544 P. del Villar. PAaLawan, Merrill 749, Celestino s. n., For. Bur. 3505 Curran, For. Bur. 5189 Manalo, MinDANAO, Province of Misamis, For. Bur. 4668 Mearns & Hutchinson: District of Davao, Copeland 1162:-District of Zamboanga, Copeland s. n. Distribution: Cochin China; Malay Peninsula; Sumatra; Java; Celebes; the Moluccas; Borneo; and the Philippines. _ Native names: Almaciga, baltic (Tagbanua), saleng (Neg.). The following species have been mentioned by various authors as occurring in the Philippines; but they are found only in cultivation and can not be considered as properly belonging to our flora: : : ARAUCARIA EXCELSA R. Br., F. Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 211. CUPRESSUS TORULOSA Don, F. Vill. 1. ¢. 211. : JUNIPERUS OCCIDENTALIS Hook., Usteri, Beitr. Kenn. Phil. Veg. (1905) 134. 2. PINUS L, Branches of two kinds; the leaves clustered in a sheath; fruit a cone. A genus of about 70 species, mainly in the north temperate zone. A few species are found in mountainous regions in the tropics. A single species, P. merkusti, crosses the equator. Sect. I. Prvaster Endl.—Apophysis of cone-scales (i. e. the special visible end portion when the cone is closed) more or less pyramidal with a central portion (umbo), which sometimes develops a point (mucro). § 1. Pinea.—Needles two, rarely 1 in shortened branches (thevefore half cylin- drical) — Some 20 species throughout the range of the genus. e 1, P. merkusti § 2. Taeda.—Needles 3 (therefore 3-angled)—About 16 species principally in North America and the East Indies.............-----------------~ .. 2. P, insularis 1. Pinus merkusii Jungh.,& De Vr. in Plant. Nov. Ind. Bat. Orient. (1845) 5, t. 2; Endl. Syn. Conif. (1847) 176; Carr. Conif. (1853) 380; Gord. Pinet. (1858) 169; Henk. & Hochst. Nadelhilz. (1865) 43; Mig. Fl. Ind. Bat. 2 (1859) 1069; De Boer Conif. Archip. Ind. (1866) 5; Parl. in DC. Prodr. 16° (1868) 389; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 211; Vidal Sinopsis Atlas (1883) xliii, ¢. 98, f. B; Rev. Pl. Vase. Filip. (1886) 296; Ceron, Cat. Pl. Herb. (1892) 188; Merr. in For. Bur. Bull. (Philip.) 1 (1903) 15; Bur. Govt. Lab. Publ. (Philip.) - (1904) 6; Perk. Frag. Fl, Philip. (1904) 35; Whitford, Philip. For, Bur. Bull. 10 part 2 (1911) 26. P. sumatrana Jungh. Bot. Zeit. 4 (1846) 698. ; P. finlaysoniana Wall. Cat. no. 6062; Blume Rumphia 3 (1847) 210. P. sylvestris Finlays. in Lour. Fl. Coch. ed. Willd. (1793) 709, non L. Medium-sized or large trees, said to. grow to a height of 25 m or more and a diameter of 70-90 cm, crown pyramidal, bark thick, brownish or ashy in color and fissured. Young branches incurved ascending. Leaves in adult state 18-25 em long, 1 mm or less broad, dorsally convex 2 ridged when dry, ventrally concave, stomata in parallel lines, enclo : in a scarious persistent transversely wrinkled sheath for about 2 cm a base. Staminate aments scattered among the leaf buds, 18-20 mm long, about 3 mm in diameter, straight or curved, obtuse, densely flowered, -170 FOXWORTHY. antheriferous bracts suborbicular, denticulate. Cones solitary, on short erect branches, maturing in the second year, 5-8.5 cm long, 1-5 cm in diameter, usually attenuate ovate. Cone scales woody, oblong, 12-23 mm long, 7-9 mm broad, slightly convex without, within subexcavate at the base to receive the seed, apex thickened shining, center of apophysis depressed and from the center to the circumference foveate-striate ; seed inserted toward the base of the scale, wing oblong knife-shaped 14 mm long, about 4 mm broad, pale-yellow, pellucid. Cotyledons usually six, very short obtuse. On well-drained dry ridges in Zambales and Mindoro. Mr. Merritt, who has very carefully studied the distribution of this species, says: ° “Southwest of the high mountain chain stretching nortlt and south from Mount Halcon is an area with a temperature considerably lower than that of sea level and with a well- _ drained and often extremely dry soil. Here conditions are right for the growth of pine (Pinus merkusii). This tree grows in pure stands and is found in open seattered groves along the higher ridges and slopes, sometimes extending well down toward sea level. This pine was observed at elevations as low as 60 m in the vicinity of Santa Cruz, the southern part of its range, while at its northern limits it was nowhere seen below 900 m. Ground fires annually burning over the grass which has crept in among these trees prevent the best of reproduction and keep the forest open.” The latitude of the region referred to in Mindoro is from about 13° to about 13° 20’ NN. ‘ : This species is represented in our herbarium by the following numbers: Luzon, Province of Zambales, Ahern 829, Russell, July 1902, Merrill 1158, Medina, Jan. 1903, Dec. Phil. For, Flor. 240 Maule, Nov. 1904, with the following field note: “Grows in pure stand on heights some 15 kilometers east of Sta. Cruz, Zamb. Forest of irregular area covering as estimated 500 hectares. Soil is loose and impregnated with copper oxide giving a dark color. No undergrowth of trees other than pine exists and fires greatly retard reproduction so that seedlings are at present rarely found. Where growing in stands they are open resembling character of white pine (P. strobus) of U. 8. Many trees growing more or less as individuals which fact seems due to: influence of soil. No P. insularis occurs in this forest but it occurs at Botolan.” For. Bur. 8228 Curran, Dee. 1907. MINDoro, For, Bur. 8521, 8734a Merritt, Jan. 1908, For. Bur. 8830, 8831 Merritt, Feb. 1908. : Native names: salit, tapulao, aguu, agoo, Distribution: Burma; Cochin China ; Sumatra; Java; Borneo; the Philippines. 2. Pinus insularis Endl. Syn. Conif. (1847) 157; Pres] Epim. Bot. (1851) 37; Parl. in DC. Prodr. 16* (1868) 390; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 212; Vidal Sinopsis Atlas (1883) xliii, t, 98, f. C; Phan. Cum. Philip. (1885) 160; Rev. Pl. Vase. Filip. (1886) 296; Ceron Cat. Pl. Herb. (1892) 188; Merr. in For. . Bur. Bull. (Philip.) 4 (1903) 15; Perk. Frag, Fl. Philip. (1904) 35; Merr. in Bur. Govt. Lab. Publ. (Philip.) 6 (1904) 6; Philip. Journ. Sei. 5 (1910) Bot. 325; Whitford Philip. For. Bur. Bull. 10 part 2 (1911) 26, pls. 2, 3. P. insularis x P. merkusii Perk, Frag. Fl, Philip. 1. ¢. 35. Pinus sp. Merr. in For. Bur. Bull. (Philip.) 1 (1903) 15. P. taeda Blanco Fl. Filip. (1837) 767; Merr. in Bur. Govt. Lab. Publ. (Philip-) 27 (1905) 82, non L. Sp. Pl. (1753) 1419 ex parte. *The Forests of Mindoro, Philip. For, Bur. Bull. 8 (1908) 22. PHILIPPINE GYMNOSPERMS. 171 P. khasya ¥F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1883) 212; Merr. in For. Bur. Bull. (Philip. ) 1 (1903) 15; non Royle ex Gord. in Lond. Gard. Mag. 16 (1840) 8. P, timoriensis Loud. ? Arb. Brit. 4: 2269. : Trees, 10-25 m: tall and sometimes 75 cm in diameter. Leaves in clusters of three, surrounded by a rather chaffy and persistent sheath which is sometimes as much as 2 cm long but usually is much shorter. Leaves long, flaccid, compressed, 3-sided, with marginal resin-canals, 18-20 em long, 0.6-1 mm broad. Male aments numerous, thick, dense, cylindraceous, obtuse, 18-22 mm long, 3.5-4 mm broad; antheriferous bracts suborbicular; anthers crested. Cones 2 or 3, verticillate, subter- minal, the younger ones oblong on erect branches, the adults on short horizontal branches or subpendulous, ovate, conical, obtusely straight or curved, short stalked, deflexed, 5-10 em long, 3-6.5 cm in diameter; falling when mature or persistent on the branches; cone-scales thick, with a tumid apophysis, which is broader than long, and an elliptic umbo. Meristele elliptic. Fibro-vascular bundle simple. Seed obovoid-conie with large wing which drops off as the seed dries. Wing clear, occasion- ally streaked or mottled with darker lines. Seed pale-straw-color or pur- plish, often of light color with splotches of brown or purple 5-7 mm long, 2.5-3 mm in greater and 1.5-2 mm in lesser diameter. Extreme length of wing 2 cm, extreme breadth of wing 8 mm. In order to get some idea of the range of variability in size and shape of cones, 115 adult cones from one locality in Benguet were measured. The length of these varied from 5 to 8.4 em, the width (open) from 4 to 6.2 cm. The shape varied from narrowly cylindric-conic to broadly ovoid-conic. Cone scales occasionally with the apophysis prolonged forward into a more or less spiny point, or apophysis smooth in front. Umbo small, deciduous or sometimes persistent. The cones seem to take three years to mature. This pine shows a striking resemblance in habit to P. ponderosa Dougl. of the western United States. : The wood is used a good deal locally in northern Luzon. The resin has been studied as a possible commercial source of turpentine; but it does not seem promising, because of the scattered nature of the stand. The tree is very common in the mountains of northern Luzon. Luzon, Province of Ilocos Bur, For. Bur. 5652 Klemme: Province of Abra, Bur, Sci. 7113 Ramos, For. Bur. 14616 Darling: Subprovince of Lepanto-Bontoc, Por. Bur. 11262 Klemme, For. Bur. 10969 Curran, Vanoverbergh 185: Subprovince of Benguet, Ahern 830, ‘331, 832, 833, Scheerer, Ahern 852, Lardizibal, Topping 122, 123, 124, Merrill 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, Bryant, For. Bur. 978, 979 Barnes, Elmer 6390, Williams 1205, 989, For. Bur. 5068, 5144, 5145, 5203, 10842, 10872, 10918 Cartan: Bur. Sci. 2827, 2865 Mearns, For, Bur. 9639 Zschokke, For. Bur. 18002, 18005 Merritt, For. Bur. 18065, 18186, 18202 Curran, Merritt & Zschokke, Bur, Sci, 8409, 8899 McGregor, Bur. Sci. 12908 Fénia: Province of Pangasinan, Bur, Sci. 8290 Ramos: Province of Zambales, Merrill 2116 Irey, Merrill 2978 Garcia, Dec. Phil. For. Fl. 16 Merrill, For. Bur. 7000, 172 FOXWORTHY. 7001 Curran, For. Bur. 8416, 8999, 9509 Curran & Merritt (Note with 8999, “Height 80 feet, Diam. 20 in.; No, annual rings 100; merchantable length approx. 50 ft.; mature, 2 and 3 year old cones. New cones all stages. Male flowers. Very abundant forming pure stands. Tree cut on sample acre as average tree. Sample acre showed 50 sound and 21 unsound trees over 12 in. in diam. Largest tree 36 in. smallest tree 4 in. Very scanty reproduction, due mainly to fire”), Bur. Sci. 4819, 5000 Ramos. Found at elevations of from 300 to 2,700 m. Native names: saleng, al-al, parua, balibo, boo-boo, bulbul, tapulao. Distribution: Philippine Islands and Timor. Class VI. GNETALES. _ Trunk simple or branched. Vascular bundles collateral. Vessels pres- ent in secondary wood. Leaves opposite, undivided. Flowers unisexual or apparently perfect, with perianth-segments united into a floral en- velope and more or less enclosed by involucral bracts. Pistillate flowers with ovules of uniform size. Fruit structures rather various. Cotyle- dons 2. Resin-canals wanting. GNETACEAE. ‘Subfamily Gyeromweax. The grown plants are generally woody climb- ers with a twining stem, more rarely erect bushes or trees. The round stems are swollen and jointed at the nodes, where are borne in decussating pairs the simple, stalked, feather-veined, exstipulate, evergreen leaves. In germination the cotyledons are carried up on a long hypocotyl, a lateral outgrowth (or sucker) of which remains in the seed and absorbs the en- dosperm for the benefit of the seedling. The flowers are generally — dioecious and borne in axillary and terminal, simple or branched spikes, associated with the decussate-opposite bracts. The very numerous (to forty) male flowers are arranged in several whorls above each pair of bracts; the series terminates in a simple whorl of sterile female flowers. On the female spikes the flowers are arranged in whorls of three to eight. In both sexes they are surrounded at the base by numerous jointed hairs. The male flowers have a tubular perianth with a contracted mouth, which, shows an indication of two lobes. The slender floral axis projects above it and terminates in two laterally placed sessile unilocular anthers with transverse dehiscence. Pistillate flowers with sack-like involucre. Ovule with two integuments, the second of which is absent from the sterile ovules in the male inflorescence. In the fruiting stage the perianth becomes fleshy and the outer integument woody, the whole having the appearance ofadrupe. By cross and longitudinal divisions of the embryo-sac mother- _ cell there are developed several embryo-sac fundaments; a parietal stand- ing layer of nuclei are developed and from one of these is developed the single embryo, after fertilization. ‘ hoot ia “The secondary wood contains numerous large vessels, Climbers, such as Gnetwm scandens, resemble, in the mode of secondary thickening of PHILIPPINE GYMNOSPERMS. 173 the stem, Cycas and the climbing stems of Menispermaceae among the Dicotyledons, where the growth of the original ring of bundles ceases after a time, and a second ring is formed in the cortex, which is simi- larly followed by a third, and so on.”? A single genus, Gnetwm, with about 20 species, in the tropics of both hemispheres. I can distinguish but four Philippine species, two trees and two climbing vines. The common one is Gnetum latifolium Bl. which is found throughout the Malay region and which is doubtfully distinct from G. scandens Roxb. No authentic material of the latter species has been available to me, but the descriptions make the two species seem very much alike. KEY TO PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF GNETUM. a. Trees. ; b. Fruit sessile 2 1. Gg bb. Fruit stalked ‘ OG. arboreum aa, Climbers. ' bd. Large vine, twigs coarse, leaves, or some of them, acuminate at apex; staminate flower cluster more than 15 mm in length......---- 3. G. latifolium bb. Slender vine, twigs fine, leaves not acuminate; staminate flower cluster not more than 15 mm in length 4, G. minus 1. Gnetum gnemon L. Mant. 1 (1767) 125; Lam. Encycl. Meth. Bot. 2 (1786) 764; Willd., Sp. Pl. 4% (1787) 591; Blume, Tijd. Nat. Gesch. 1 (1834) 160; Roxb. Fl. Ind. 3 (1832) 518; Endl. Syn. Conif. (1847) 250; Blume, Rumphia 4 (1848) 3, t. 176, t. 178 B, f..5; Mig. Fl. Ind. Bat. 2 (1859) 1067; Parl. in DC. Prodr. 16? (1868) 349; Vidal, Phan. Cum. Philip. (1885) 160; Rev. Pl. Vase. Filip. (1886) 295; Hook. f. Fl. Brit, Ind. 5 (1890) 641; Ceron Cat. Pl. Herb. (1892) 187; Karsten in Ann. Jard. Bot. Buitenz. 11 (1893) 203; _Koorders, Meded. ’s Lands. Plant. 19 (1898) 265; Warburg, Monsunia 1 (1900) 195; Schumann & Lauterbach, Fl. Deutsch. Schutzgeb. (1901) 156; Koorders & Valeton, Bijd. Ken. Boomsoort. Java 9 (1903) 349; Merr. in For. Bur. Bull. (Philip.) 1 (1903) 16; Bur. Govt. Lab. Publ. (Philip.) 27 (1905) 82; Philip. Journ, Sci. 1 (1906) Suppl. 24; Koorders-Schumacher, Syst. Verz. Herb. Koord. 3 (1911) Gnetaceae 1. - : G. sylvestris Brongniart in Duperrey Voy. Bot. (1828) 12. G. ovalifolium Poir. in Encyel. Suppl. 2 (1786) 810. : G. Seaninen Grif. ee, Vegetable Kingdom (1846) 233, f. 164; Notulae 4 (1854) 30; in Trans. Linn. Soc. Bot. 22 (1859) 308; Beccari, Malesia 1 (1877) 183. : G. griffithii Parl. in A.DC. Prodr. 16* (1868) 349. G. gnemon sylvestris F.-Vill. Noviss. App- (1883) 210. G. gnemon laurinum F.-Vill. 1. ¢. 210. G. domestica mas Rumph. Herb. Amb. 1 (1750) 181-183. G. domestica femina Rumph. l. ¢., G, silvestris Rumph, 1. ¢. Mail-Ombi Rheede, Hort. Malab. 5 (1685) 51, ¢. 26. Mala Elengi Rheede 1. ¢. 109, t. 55 ?. ™ From Rendle, Classif. of Flowering Plants 1 (1904) 123. 174 FOXWORTHY. A large shrub or small tree, sometimes 10-15 m tall and 10-20 em in diameter breast high. Bark light-colored, thin and finely fissured. Wood hard and heavy, pale-yellowish or whitish in color. Leaves small or large, coriaceous or chartaceous, greenish or yellowish-green in drying, very variable in size and shape, ovate-oblong or lanceolate, tapering to both ends or broader at the base; large specimens 11-18 cm long and 4-7 cm wide. Ripe fruit reddish, sessile, very variable in size and shape. The ripe fruit is commonly eaten, after cooking. ‘The leaves are also cooked and eaten and the bark furnishes a strong bast fiber which is used in making cordage. . A tree of rather scattered occurrence but wide distribution in the lowland forests and on low ridges. Luzon, Province of Bataan, Merrill 2516, Williams 505, 713,-For. Bur. 178 Barnes, For. Bur. 614, 637, 2490 Borden, Whitford 1036, 1078, 1253, For. Bur. 2501 Meyer, Bur. Sci. 1601, 1602 Foeworthy: Province of La Laguna, For, Bur. 10130 Curran: Province of Tayabas, Bur. Sci. 13197 Foxworthy & Ramos. MIN- Doro, Jose Nable 19, For. Bur. 6185 Merritt. Leyte, Elmer 7087, 7348. Mrn- DANAO, Province of Surigao, Ahern 349, 410 Quadras: District of Zamboanga, Por. Bur. 9155 Whitford & Hutchinson. Patawan, Merrill 848. Native name: Bago. This same name is used for this plant in various parts of the Malay Archipelago. Said to be cultivated throughout the Netherlands Indies and to have a large number of varieties. Africa; tropical Asia; Malay Peninsula; Java; Bornco; Celebes; Amboina; Moluccas; New Guinea; Pacific Islands; the Philippines. 2. Gnetum arboreum sp. noy. Plate XXXII. Arbor 7 m altus, 10 cm diametro. Fructus pedicellatus. A tree, 7 m tall and 10 em in diameter. Leaves elliptic, acuminate at apex and cuneate at base, tapering into the slightly winged petiole which is canaliculate above, 5—9 em long and 2.5-4.5 cm wide. Second- ary veins 6-8, with connection of veins as in G. latifolium Bl. Fruit orange-red on short branch. In our material this branch is only 3.5 em long with four internodes, Only two fruits are left on the type and these are each about 2.5 em long and 17-48 mm in diameter, taper- ing at apex and base, small muero at apex. Pedicels about 2 em long. - The appearance of this form is what one might except if a small-_ leaved form of G@. latifolium were to acquire the tree habit. Found at an elevation of more than 900 m, on Mt. Binuang in the former district of Infanta, Tayabas Province, Luzon. Type: Bur. Sci. No. 9439, collected by C. B. Robinson, Aug. 28, 1909. ont Gnetum latifolium Blume in Noy. Fam. (1833) 30, et in Hoev. & De Vriese, ‘ Tijd. Nat. Gesch. 1 (1834) 162; Rumphia 4 (1848) 5, ¢. 174; Endl. Syn. Conif. - (1847) 251; Pres] Epim. Bot. (1851) 236; Mig. Fl. Ind. Bat. 2 (1859) 1067: Parl. in DC. Prodr. 16? (1868) 350; Beceari, Malesia 1 (1877) 181; F.-Vill- Noviss. App. (1880) 210; Vidal, Sinopsis Atlas (1883) xlii, t. 97, f. 4; Phan. Cum. Philip. (1885) 160; Rey. Pl. Vase. Filip. (1886) 295; Ceron, Cat. Pl. PHILIPPINE GYMNOSPERMS. 17 Herb. (1892) 187; Karsten in Ann. Jard. Bot. Buitenz. 11 (1893) 209; Koorders Meded. ’s Lands Plant. 19 (1898) 265; Warburg, Monsunia 1 (1900) 195, 197; Schumann & Lauterbach, Fl. Deutsch. Schutzgeb. (1901) 158; Koorders & Valeton Bijd. Ken. Boomsoort. Java 9 (1903) 352; Usteri, Beitr. Ken. Phil. Veg. (1905) 134; Merr. in Bur. Govt. Lab. Publ. (Philip.) 27 (1905) 82; Philip. Journ, Sci. 1 (1906) Suppl. 25; Koorders-Schumacher, Syst. Verz. Herb. Koord. 3 (1911) Gnetaceae 1. Abutua indica Lour. Fl. Coch. 2 (1790) 630; Juss. in Lam. Encye. Bot. Suppl. 1 (1810) 35. This is the oldest name; but I have not seen Loureiro’s specimen. Gnetum funiculare Blume Nov. Fam. (1833) ; Ann. Sei. Nat. II 2 (1834) 106; Tijdschr. Nat. Gesch. 1 (1834) 162, 4; Rumphia 4 (1848) 7; Mig. Fl. Ind. Bat. 2 (1859) 1068; Endl. Syn. Conif. (1847) 252; Parl. in “DC. Prodr. 16 (1868) 351; Brongn. in Duperr. Voy. Bot. (1828) 12; Kurz in Flora 55 (1872) 350; For. Fl. 2 (1877) 496; Hook. f. in FI. Brit. Ind, 5 (1888) 643; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1883) 211. Thoa pendula Blanco Fl. Filip. (1837) 746. . Thoa edulis Blanco FI. Filip. ed. 2 (1845) 514, non Willd. Sp. Pl. 4 (1805) 477, G. philippinense Warburg, Monsunia 1 (1900) 196. @. scandens Merr. in Bur. Govt. Lab. Publ. (Philip.) 8 (1903) 32, 114, 153; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1883) 211, non Roxb. Hort. Beng. (1814) 66. Gnemon funicularis Rumph. Herb. Amb. 5 (1747) 12, t. 8. Coarse woody vines of large size, climbing on trees in rather thick forest, from sea level up to about 600 m. Leaves membranous or char- taceous, usually becoming black in drying, oval or elliptic, acute, obtuse, acuminate or mucronulate at apex, rounded at base or narrowed into the short petiole which is sometimes winged at the side and canaliculate on its upper surface. Leaves 6-25 cm long, 2-10 em wide; secondary veins usually 5-7 pairs, usually bending upward toward the edge of the leaf and uniting with other veins. I can not follow Karsten in classification by styles of venation. There is very great variation in size and shape of leaves upon the same plant. Male flower-clusters fasciculate or race- mose, rarely solitary, terminal ; 30-50 mm long, peduncles 8-20 mm long, flowers in many series of crowded whorls. Female inflorescences axillary, fasciculate, the whole inflorescence sometimes as much as 250 mm long, individual branches long-stalked, 50-80 mm long, of about 10-15 whorls of uniseriate flowers and with short internodes. Fruit orange-red, 25-30 mm long with a pedicel 5-8 mm long. Fruit roasted and eaten. The inner coat, with its covering of hairs, has to be removed before the fruit is edible. The bast is used for cordage. This species is much sought as a source of drinking water in the forest. The vessels will flow a good quantity of fine clear water when a section 1s taken out of the trunk. I am by no means sure that this species is distinct from G. scandens Roxb., but it is the form commonly referred to this species 17 the Malay region. G@. neglectum Bl., which F.-Vill. credits to the Philippines is hot given with any citation of specimens and it may be considered as 176 | FOXWORTHY. probably not found in the Philippines, if indeed, it is distinct from this species. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur, 7081 Klemme: Subprovince of Benguet, Elmer 8714, Bur. Sci. 12681 Fénix: Province of Tarlac, Loher 7135: Province of* Pampanga, Merrill 1458 Garcia: Province of Zambales, Hallier s. n., For. Bur. 8158 Curran & Merritt: Province of Bataan, Williams 27, 543, Merrill 3158, For. Bur. 161 Barnes, For. Bur. 1895 Borden, Whitford 1236, For. Bur. 5464, 7374, 7375 Curran: Province of Rizal, Warburg 13491, Guerrero 29, Dec. Phil. For. Fl. 120 Ahern’s coll., For. Bur. 2876 Ahern’s coll., Bur. Sci. 100 Foxworthy: Province of Batangas, Cuming 1549: Province of Tayabas, For. Bur. 15055 Curran. Pow1o, Bur, Sci. 10841 McGregor. Mrnvoro, For. Bur. 4117, 11483 Merritt. Leyte, Elmer 7346, For. Bur. 12793 Rosenbluth. MINDANAO, District of Butuan, Merrill 7304: District of Davao, Williams s. n.: District of Lanao, Mrs. Clemens 412, s.n.,. 691. PAaLawan, Merrill 747. Native name culiat. This same name is applied to this plant in various parts of the Netherlands Indies. Distribution: British India and Burma, Cochin China, Sumatra, Java, Borneo, Celebes, the Moluccas, New Guinea. 4. Gnetum minus sp. nov. Plate XXXIII. Scandens. G. scandenti (ex descr.) simile sed minus. Folia elliptica vel oblonga, 4.5-9 cm longa, 2-4 cm lata; amentis masculis 1-3, fascicu- latis, cylindraceis, 6-14 mm longis, 3-4 mm latis. Amenta feminea ignota. With rather slender twigs. Leaves elliptic or oblong, tapering to both ends, acute or obtuse at apex and more or less cuneate at base, tapering into the slightly winged petiole, which is sometimes canaliculate above; dark-green above, slightly lighter beneath, becoming very much darker, but not black, in drying, 4.5-9 cm long, 2-4 em wide; secondary veins 5-8 pairs. Venation as in G. latifolium ; margin of leaf slightly thick- ened or inrolled. Staminate flower-clusters terminal on short lateral branches, 1-3 in a cluster, each one 6-14 mm long and 3-4 mm in diameter, of 5-10 whorls. Peduncle 1-9 mm long. Pistillate flower- clusters and fruit not seen. : Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns near Baguio, Subprovince of Benguet, Luzon, — in April 1907, Bur. Sci. 2513. Possibly only a small form of @. latifolium. ILLUSTRATIONS. PLaTeE XXVI. Fig. 1. Cycas circinalis L. Immature 2 cone. Bur. Sci. 3281. Photograph by Martin. 2. Cycas circinalis L. “Immature ¢ cone. Plant cultivated in Manila, Pho- tograph by Foxworthy. Prate XXVII. Cycas sp. From Palawan. ¢ cone. For, Bur. 3842. Photograph by Martin. Pirate XXVIII. Fie. 1. Dacrydium falciforme (Parl.) Pilger. For. Bur. 4425. Photograph by _ Martin. 2, Podocarpus blumei Endl. For. Bur. Lyi. Photograph by Martin. ae PraTeE XXIX. Fig. 1. Podocarpus glaucus Foxw. Merrill 5672. Photograph by Martin. 2. Podocarpus brevifolius (Stapf) Foxw. For, Bur. 9511. Photograph by = Martin. Pirate XXX. Podocarpus philippinensis Foxw. Bur. Sei. 5174. Photograph by Martin. Pirate XXXI. . Phyllocladus protractus (Warb.) Pilger. d For. Bur. 10957. Q For. Bur. 18364. Drawn by T. S. Espinosa. Pirate XXXII. Gnetum arboreum Foxw. Bur. Sci. 9439. Drawn by T. E. Espinosa. Prate XXXIII. @netum minus Foxw. Bur. Sci. 2518. Drawn by T. &. Espinosa. Ss FoxworTHyY: PHILIPPINE yMNOSPE GYMNOSPERMS.] (PHIL. JouRN. Sct., VOL. VI, No. 3. Fic. 1. CYCAS CIRCINALIS L. Immature ? cone Fic. 2. CYCAS CIRCINALIS L. Immature ¢ cone, PLaTe XXVI- FoxworTHY : PHILIPPINE GYMNOSPERMS. ] [PHIL. JourN. Sct., Vou. VI, No. 3. |9 ¢ jou Pirate XXVIII, CYCAS sp. 4 cone. FoxworTHy : PHILIPPINE GYMNOSPERMS. ] [PHIL. JouRN. ScI., VOL. VI, No. 3 Fic. 1. DACRYDIUM FALCIFORME (Part.) Pits. A PT et Te Fic. 2. PODOCARPUS BLUME! Enot. Piate XXVIII FOXWORTHY : PHILIPPINE GYMNOSPERMS. } Fic. 2. PODOCARPUS BREVIFOLIUS (STAPI PLATE XXIX, [PHIL. JOURN. Sct., Vou. VI, No. 3. Fr) Foxw. FoxworTHY : PHILIPPINE GYMNOSPERMS. ] [PHIL. Journ. Sct., Vou. VI, No. 3. £ : “shebang Ser He are annie of 4, calopagnie Pork.) 24° “For. Bur. 488, 593 ce Garcia, Jan. 1903, in fruit, Merrill $154, Oct. 1903, in fruit, 258 FOXWORTHY. Barnes, For. Bur. 743, 707 Borden, May 1904, in flower, For. Bur. 1317, 1322, 1409, 1527, 1641, 1667, 1675 Borden, For. Bur. 1616, 1632, 1633, 1635, 1637, 1638, 1643, 1647, 1649, 1657, 1658, 1788, 1789 Borden, Aug. 1904, in fruit, For. Bur. 2128 Borden, Dec. 1904, in fruit, Vor. Bur. 2256 Meyer, Dec. 1904, in fruit, Whit- ford 352, June 1904, in flower, Whitford 1223, April 1905, in fruit, Whitford 1365, For. Bur, 1485 Ahern’s coil., July 1904, in fruit, Bur. Sei. 1627 Foxworthy, For. Bur. 5282, 5945, 7225 Curran: Province of Bulacan, Bur. Sct. 12273 Fow- worthy: Province of Rizal, Vidal 73, 83, 85, 86, 651, 1167, 2168, Merrill 1627 Ramos, Mar. 1903, in fruit, Merrill 2803 Ramos, July 1903, in fruit, For. Bur. 471 Ahern’s coll., April 1904, in flower, Dee. Phil. For. Fl. 103 Ahern’s coll., May 1904, in flower, Loher 5600, Apr. 1904 (fls. yellowish, sweet-scented), Bur. Sei. 1463, 2168 Ramos, For. Bur. 2985 Ahern’s coll., Apr. 1905, in flower, For. Bur. 10005, 10006, 10019 Curran; Province of La Laguna, For. Bur 10107, 10152 Curran: Province of Camarines, For. Bur. 10761 Curran: Province of Albay, Cuming 882, in flower, For. Bur. 10609, 10617 Curran, For. Bur. 15067 Rosen- bluth. Trcao, For. Bur. 12554 Rosenbluth. Massare, Merrill 2766 Barnes, June 1903, in flower, Whitford 1692. Muinvoro, For. Bur. 11389, 11401, 11408 Merritt. Crs, Vidal 2165. Mtnnanao, Zamboanga Peninsula, For. Bur. 9138, 9371 Whitford & Hutchinson. The last two numbers may belong to a distinct species. The leaves are larger and more membranaceous and the tertiary veins much more prominent than is usually the case in A. thurifera. Our material for these two numbers is not sufficiently complete to warrant separating them from the common species at the present time. The field notes with our herbarium specimens seem to indicate that the time of flowering for this species is during the months of April, May, and June and the time of fruiting during the months of January, February, March, April, May, July, August, October, November, and December. Blanco, 1. ¢., states that this species flowers and fruits in the month of June, in the mountains of San Mateo. He also states that a hard whitish resin, which is used for incense in some of the churehes, is obtained from this species. The correctness of this statement seems very doubtful, as we have not found this species to produce such a resin. There is also confusion regarding Blanco’s use of common names for this species. He gives the names of lauwaan and sandana, which we have found to apply to other species. We have found the following native names used for this species: mayapis (Tag.); palosapis (Tag.); dagum (Tag.); dagang na putt (Tag.) ; guyong or duyong (Iloc.) ; letis (Mas.). 4. Anisoptera sp. This form is as nearly as possible intermediate between A. thurifera and A. curtisii. The habit of the tree and the appearance of many of the mature leaves is that of A. thurifera. The young leaves look like those of A. curtisii and the fruits also resemble those of that species. In some of the examples listed under A. thurifera, the fruit is small and it is difficult to tell whether it is really immature A. thurifera or this form. This form has been found in the proyinces of Bataan and Zambales and is represented by the following: Province of Bataan, For. Bur, 1377, 1381, 1390, 1407 Borden, July 1904, with young fruit, For. Bur, 1792 Borden. Sept. 1904, in fruit, For, Bur. 12921, 12923 Alwarez, Aug. 1909, in fruit, For, Bur, 17515 Curran, Dec. 1909, in fruit: Prov ince of Zambales, For. Bur. 6974 Curran. at PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. 259 3. HOPEA Roxb. Stipules minute or small, early deciduous. Flowers almost always in unilateral spikes or racemes, these generally in racemose, rarely compound panicles. Calyx often glabrous, but petals always hairy outside. Calyx- segments imbricate, the two outer ones in the flower generally much larger than the others; growing into thin membranaceous wings, as the fruit ripens. Stamens 15, 10 ina few species (1. plagata is said to have more than 30 stamens) ; anther-cells equal ; connective prolonged into along awn. Stylopodium in most species large, in some wanting, but generally indicated by a ring of hairs. In most cases the cotyledons are thick-fleshy, the outer rounded surface longitudinally channelled ; both bifid to the point of attachment of the hypocotyl. The outer or radicular cotyledon generally more or less concave, embracing the inner or placentar cotyledon. Hypocotyl and petioles of cotyledon half as long or as long as the seed, generally hairy, except the glabrous shining tip, imbedded on the outside of the embryo ‘in a groove between the lobes of the outer cotyledon, while the lignified placenta with the remains of the dissepiments intrudes between the lobes of the inner. ‘There are variations from this type in a number of species, but I haye not had an opportunity to see them. here is said to be a great deal of variation in anatomical structure in the genus, but the difficulties in getting sufficient material of most of the species have been such that’ I have been unable to carry out any complete comparative study for the genus. . The bark is usually fissured and dark-brown or black. Where the color is brown, the bark is usually thin, where it is black, there is thick bark. The inner layers of the bark are usually yellow with a brownish tinge. The wood is pale-yellow or straw-color in the sap and the heart has a brownish color. ‘This seems to be true of our species so far as known. The wood structure is difficult to distinguish from that of Vatica or of some species of Shorea. : : ie The genus has about fifty species, 11 species being found in the Phil- ippines. ‘The resin of some species is used. It is a fair grade of gum dammart and is collected from H. plagata. It occurs similarly in H. prerret, H. acuminata, and possibly other species. aay year, but the infrequent collections : ‘ make it possible for such a belief to be common, even if the species ~_ friting regularly every year. The fruits are small and rather fragile and; presumably, do not retain their vitality very Tong sfter falling from the tree. ae : : 260 FOXWORTHY. KEY TO PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF HOPEA. a. Secondary nerves few and prominent. b. Leaves narrowly oblong. c. Leaves bilaterally symmetrical or nearly so, 2-3 em wide.. 5. H. sp. (Naric) ce. Leaves unilaterally unsymmetrical. d. Leaves 10 to 15 em long, 2.2 to 7 em wide; fruit less than 8 cm long. e. Stipules long, semipersistent ; fruit 6.5 to 7.5 cm long. 3. H. philippinensis ee. Stipules short, fruit 3ib:to 4.3-em-long...... aia 1. H. basilanica dd. Leaves larger, fruit 8 em or more in length...............- 2. H. mindanensis bb. Leaves not narrowly oblong. , ¢. Leaves broad, elliptic-oval 7. H. ovalifolia ce. Leaves lanceolate. d. Leaves 3 to 6 em long, with few (5 to 7) pairs of secondary nerves. 6. H. sp. (Gyam) dd. Leaves larger. e. Leaves long-acuminate, usually without domatia.......... 8. H. acuminata ee. Leaves not long-acuminate, domatia prominent.............-.. 4. H. plagata aa. Secondary nerves not distant; leaves coriaceous, glabrous, with numerous in- distinct and almost parallel nerves. b. Fruit more than 1 em long.......... Lagi Eee bb. Fruit less than 1 em long. 8 ce, Fruit reddish-brown, leaves with domatia..............-.--------.---1-0-- 9. H. pierret ce, Fruit greenish, leaves without domatia 10. H. sp. Sect. I. Eunopra. Secondary nerves conspicuous, not approximate,’ not more than 20 pairs. Stamens 15, sometimes 12 to 15. Stylopodium always large. It seems that most of our species belong in this section. Two undeter- mined species are placed here at a venture, it seeming more probable that they will go here than in the section Petalandra. 1, Hopea basilanica sp. nov. Plate XLII. Arbor magna; foliis chartaceis, anguste oblongis vel ellipticis, glabris, supra nitidis, 10 ad 15 cm longis, 2.2 ad 4.8 cm latis, brevissime caudato- acuminatis, basi paullo obliquis, obtusis, utrinque glaberrimis, costa media utrinque nervis lateralibus subtus prominentibus; petiolo brevissimo ; paniculis brevibus terminalibus vel lateralibus; floribus -...-..-------------7 3 fructu majusculo, calyce accreto cincto; calycis fructiferi lobi aucti 3.5 ad 4.3 em longi, latitudine fere 10 ad 15 mm. Large tree 18 m tall, with thick, black, furrowed bark, like that of H., acuminata. Leaves chartaceous, narrowly oblong or elliptic, glabrous, shining above, 10 to 15 cm long, 2.2 to 4.8 em wide. Apex acuminate, tapering and unsymmetrical at base, the part above the midrib being the larger. Petiole dark-colored and wrinkled, when dry. Midrib slightly — pubescent above ; secondary nerves 10 to 12 pairs, ascending and bent Up-— ward at the margin of the leaf. Domatia in the axils of at least the lowest eee pairs of veins. Tertiary veins parallel and reticulate. Inflorescence PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE, 261 axillary in few-flowered racemose panicles. Occasionally two inflores- cences from one axil. Rachis of inflorescence brownish pubescent. Fruit 3 to 4 mm in diameter, 4 to 5 mm long; resin-cavities in lower part of fruit. Fruiting calyx with 2 long wings 3.5 to 4.3 em long and 10 to 15 mm wide, with about 9 principal veins. Wings yellow when dry, the veins being of darker color and the fruit and base of wings very dark-brown. _ The bases of these two larger wings are expanded so as practically to conceal the small wings. , Differs from H. odorata in shape of leaves and in its thick short petioles, in size of fruit and in expanded bases of the two enlarged calyx wings; from H. plagata in its narrower leaves, shorter petioles, smaller fruit, with expanded bases to calyx wings; from H. philippinensis in fruit and the absence of the long stipules. BasiILan, For. Bur. 15220 Klemme, Aug. 1910; For. Bur, 15408 Pray. Common name: dalindingan. 2. Hopea mindanensis sp. nov. Plate XLIII. Arbor magna, 12 ad 15 m alta, 25 cm diam. ; foliis anguste oblongis, brevissime acuminatis, basi irregulariter cordatis, auriculatis, costa media _ + utrinque nervis lateralibus subtus prominentibus ; lamina 15 ad 35 cm longa, 6 ad 11 cm lata, nervis lateralibus 18 ad 24; petiolo brevissimo (5 ad 15 mm), pubescente. Fructu majusculo calyce accreto cincto ; calycis lobis majoribus basi ovato tumido, limbo late spathulato, apice rotundato, basim versus valde attenuato, nervis % percurso. Minpanao, District of Zamboanga, For. Bur. 9029 Whitford & Hutchinson : (type). Also represented by For. Bur. 9376 Whitford & Hutchinson, Jan. 1908, Por. Bur. 9436, Feb. 1908, all three numbers from the same locality. ‘ This species differs from H. philippinensis in the larger size of leaves and fruit, the pubescent petioles and the auriculate leaf-bases. : Common name: magasusu. 3. Hopea philippinensis Dyer in Journ. Bot. 46 (1878) 100; Vidal in Rev. Ph. Vase. Filip. (1886) 62; Brandis in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. 31 (1895) 64; _ Eyerett & Whitford in Philip. Bur. For. Bull. 5 (1906) 16, 28, 53; Foxworthy in Philip. Journ. Sci. 4 (1909) Bot. 515; Whitford in Philip. Bur, For. Bull. a | a (1911) 75, pl. 79. ae A medium-sized tree with thin, dark-colored bark. Leaves thinly “coriaceous, narrowly oblong, caudate-acuminate, base very unequal-sided, obtuse and almost glabrous, midrib and the 17 to 22 pairs of secondary -Rerves prominent beneath; domatia conspicuous ; leaf-blade 10 to ou em long, 3 to 5 em wide; petiole very short, 6.5 mm long, black and wrinkled. Panicle rather short, terminal or lateral, usually appearing from the branches below the leaves, i. e., from the axils of fallen leaves. Fruits _with two, long, spathulate calyx-lobes, 6.5 to 7.5 cm long and 2 cm wide, Very much narrowed toward the base. Fruit red when fresh, sometimes becoming chocolate-color on drying. ee aekngeene oF ee 262 FOXWORTHY. Probably the most prominent feature in the fresh material is the linear- lanceolate acute stipules, 2 to 3.5 cm long, some of which persist in the dried material. Luzon, Province of La Laguna, For, Bur. 17650 Curran, Feb. 1910, in flower: Province of Tayabas, For. Bur. 10194, 10376 Curran, For. Bur. 10389 Curran, May 1908, in fruit, For. Bur. 11503 Whitford, For. Bur. 12516 Rosenbluth, For. Bur. 14939, 18636, 18662 Darling, For. Bur. 23017 Aguilar: Province of Cama- rines, For. Bur. 10705 Qurran: Province of Albay, Cuming 879, in fruit, For. Bur. 10578, 10619 Qurran. Leyte, For. Bur. 12738 Rosenbluth, Mar. 1909, in flower. NeGros, Province of Negros Occidental, For. Bur. 7270 Everett, May 1907, in fruit, For. Bur. 7298 Everett, April 1907, in fruit, For. Bur. 13757 Foxworthy, For. Bur. 15030 Danao, Mar. 1908, in fruit, For. Bur. 17357, 17492, 17496 QGurran. Mrnpanao, Subprovince of Butuan, For. Bur. 7588 Hutchinson. Native names: guisoc-guisoc (V.), manguitarem (Tag., B.), paina (B.). 4, Hopea plagata (Blanco) Vidal Rey. Pl. Vasc. Filip. (1886) 62; Brandis in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. 31 (1895) 64; Foxworthy in Philip. Journ. Sci. 2 (1907) Bot. 396, 4 (1909) Bot. 515; Merritt in Philip. Bur. For. Bull, 8 (1908) 48; Whitford in Philip. Journ. Sci. 4 (1910) Bot. 715, in Philip. Bur. For. Bull. 10? (1911) 73, pls. 76, 77. Mocanera plagata Blanco F). Filip. ed. 1 (1837) 447. Dipterocarpus plagatus Blanco Fl. Filip. ed. 2 (1845) 311. Anisoptera plagata Blume Mus. Bot. Lugd.-Bat. 2 (1856) 42; A. DC. Prodr. 16? (1868) 616. 6 Shorea reticulata F.-Vill. Noviss. App. 21, non Dyer in Hook. f. Fl. Brit, Ind. 1 (1874) 307. : Hopea odorata var.? Vidal Sinopsis Atlas (1883) xv, t. 15, f. A, 1-4. Large trees with thick, fissured, black bark. Leaves chartaceous or thinly coriaceous, glabrous, lanceolate, 8 to 12 cm long, 3 to 5 cm wide, entire, apex acuminate, base cuneate ; secondary nerves 8 to 12 pairs, with domatia in their axils on under side of leaf; petiole 1.5 to 2.5 cm long. Young leaves are distinctly viscid. I have not seen the species in flower. Blanco says that there are more than 30 stamens and no style. Fruit conical, 12 to 13 mm long, 5 to 6 mm in diameter, smooth, shining, brown, with 2 long calyx-lobes, 3 to 3.5 em long and 7 to 9 mm wide, oblanceolate and often more or less irregular, with about 8 principal veins; the three smaller calyx-lobes overlapping, blunt or acute at the apex and less than half the length of the fruit. _ Luzo, Province of Cagayan, For, Bur, 17240, 17299 Curran: Province of Ilocos Norte, For. Bur. 13052 Paraiso: Province of Nueva Vizcaya, For. Bur. 18403 Alwarez: Province of Nueva Ecija, Vidal 84, For. Bur. 8429 Ourran, For. Bur. 14308 Saroea: Province of Pangasinan, For, Bur. 8292 Curran & Merritt, For. Bur. 12981 Alvarez, For. Bur. 13492, 13523 Medina, For. Bur. 14360 Villamil: Province of Zambales, For. Bur. 5905, 5919, 6928, 6930 Curran, For. Bur. 6017 Aguilar, For. Bur. 8122, 8124 Curran & Merritt, For. Bur. 11043 Zschokke, For, Bur. 13200 Cortes: Province of Bataan, For, Bur. 17625 Curran (this specimen is very fragmentary and of doubtful determination) : Province of Bulacan, For, sates, Bur. 11151 Aguilar, Bur. Sei, 12870 Fomworthy: Province of Tayabas, For. Bur. — 4531 Kobbe, Junie 1906, in fruit, For. Bur, 11515 Whitford, For. Bur. 22167 Alvarez: Province of Sorsogon, For: Bur. 10623 Curran. Muxporo, For, Bur. PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. 263 12028 Merritt. Muinpanao, District of Zamboanga, For. Bur. 6565, 9496 Hutchin- son, For. Bur. 9040, 9289 Whitford & Hutchinson. Bastian, For. Bur, 12369 Hutchinson. Many of our specimens are fragmentary and it is quite possible that there may be more than one species in the material cited above. The following numbers seem to belong to what Whitford” calls black yacal. The chief apparent difference in herbarium material seems to be that the leaves are a little broader and, perhaps, more inclined to be coriaceous. In drying, the leaves turn very dark and are more or less covered above with a glaucescence. Luzon, Province of Pangasinan, For. Bur. 19445 Agama: Province of Zam- bales, For. Bur. 13201, 13202 Cortes. MINDANAO, District of Zamboanga, For. Bur. 9004 Whitford & Hutchinson. This species produces a resin or gum dammar, which is sometimes collected by the natives and used for torches. - s The flowering time of this species is not understood. Blanco, |. ¢., says that it flowers only in the month of March. In some sections, the people claim that it flowers only once in five or seven years, Native names: yacal (Tag.), saplongan (Tag.), siggay (Cag.), betic (I1.), guisoe (B., V., Moro), taggai (II.). 5. Hopea sp. “Naric.” Leaves narrowly oblong, 5 to 10 cm long, 16 to 26 mm wide, apex long-caudate-acuminate, base rounded, secondary nerves 10 to 12 pairs, with domatia in their axils. Petiole 3 to 5 mm long. Stipules. early , deciduous. - Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur. 6497, 13414 Klemme. The following two numbers probably do not belong here; but, I do not know where else to place them. Luzon, Province of Bataan, For. Bur. 589 Barnes, Mar. 1904. MINDANAO, District of Zamboanga, For. Bur. 9404 Whitford & Hutchinson, Feb. 1908. 6. Hopea sp. “Gyam.” : This large tree seems to be the same as that which occurs under the same name in the eastern part of British North Borneo. The bark is | thin and brownish. The wood is a very heavy and very hard yacal. _ A tree of rather gregarious habit, growing on low flat lands near the coast. The leaves are elliptic or elliptic-lanceolate or narrowly oblong, 8 to 6 cm long and 1.5 to 2 em wide, apex bluntly caudate-acuminate, _ base cuneate; secondary nerves 5 to 7 pairs, with very large domatia in their axils on the under side. Perhaps the most distinct species which ___ We have in the genus. hee A single sterile specimen from Tawi Tawi, _ Schiick, June, 1910. __ 7. Hopea ovalifolia Boerl. in Cat. Hort. Bot. Bog. 1 (1899) es oe The description of this species is very meaget and is from: sterile material; but we have a sheet from the garden at Buitenzorg, determined Dr. Boerlage as this species and it seems to correspond quite closely to ; For. Bur. 13380, collected by W. collection of ours, also sterile. _ « philip. Bur. For. Bull. 107 (1911) 7 e 264 FOXWORTHY. Leaves oval 12 to 18 cm long, 7 to 10 cm wide, shortly acuminate, secondary nerves about 12 arcuate-ascending, rather prominent on under side of leaf, the younger parts minutely lepidote. Mrnpanao, District of Zamboanga, For. Bur. 9133, 93874 Whitford & Hutchin- son, Dee. 1907, Jan. 1908. ; Sect. II. Peraranpra Hassk. (genus). Secondary nerves conspicuous, not approximate, not more than 20 pairs ; tertiary nerves generally parallel, approximate, but not conspicuous. Stamens 10, on broad short filaments, which are sometimes monadelphous. Stylopodium either wanting, or a fleshy rim or tube on the top of the truncated ovary. The only Philippine species which we know to belong to this section is the following. 8. Hopea acuminata Merr. in Bur. Govt. Lab. Publ. (Philip.) 29 (1905 ) 30; Philip. Journ. Sci. 1 (1906) Suppl. ‘98; Foxworthy in Philip. Journ. Sci. 2 (1907) Bot. 389, 4 (1909) Bot. 514, pl. 27, f. 68; Whitford in Philip. Journ. Sei. 4 (1910) Bot. 703, Philip. Bur. For. Bull. 10* (1911) 75, pl. 80. A tree reaching a height of 40 m, with broadly lanceolate, narrowly acuminate, glabrous leaves, 8 cm long or less, and small flowers in uni- lateral racemes, which are arranged in terminal and axillary panicles. . Branches nearly black when dry, glabrous, striate. Leaves 4 to 8 em long, 2 to 3 em wide, submembranaceous, shining above, the base inequilateral, rounded at least on one side of the lamina, the apex long-slender- acuminate; nerves 8 to 10 pairs, rather prominent beneath ; petioles 5 to 8 mm long, rugose, glabrous. Inflorescence grayish-stellate-pubescent, the panicles 5 to 6 cm long or less, the spicate branches 1.5 cm long or less. Calyx rusty-pubescent, the sepals 5, imbricate, the outer two slightly larger than the inner. Petals slightly pubescent on the outside, faleate, 4 mm long, 1.8 mm wide, obtuse. Stamens 10; filaments thick ; anthers 0.4 mm long, the single appendage slender, equaling the anther in length. Ovary glabrous, 3-celled, cach cell 2-ovuled; style short; stylopodium none. Fruit glabrous, the two wings oblong, about 2 cm long, 5 mm wide, the apex rounded. A tall tree, with a slender, straight trunk, growing in the hill forests from an altitude of 100 to about 800 m above the sea. = Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur. 17209 Curran: Province of Ilocos Norte, For. Bur. 13869, 13874 Merritt & Darling: Province of Nueva Vizcaya, For. Bur. 10887 Curran, For. Bur. 18028 Merritt: Province of La Union, For. Bur, 13002 Paraiso: Province of Pangasinan, For. Bur. 14357 Villamil: Province of Tarlac, For. Bur. 15405 Agama: Province of Nueva Ecija, For. Bur. 22387, 22390 Aloass’ — Province of Bulacan, Bur, Sci. 12269 Fowworthy: Province of Bataan, For. Bur. — 786 Borden, May 1904, in flower, (type), Whitford 335, May 1904, in fowl, For. Bur. 1175, 1245 Borden, For. Bur. 1592 Borden, Aug. 1904, in fruit, Merrill 886}, Aug. 1904, in fruit, Bur. Sci, 1563 Foaworthy, For. Bur. 1497, 17595 Mcchlrgl . PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. 265 For. Bur. 7504 Curran, Sept. 1907, in fruit: Province of La Laguna, For, Bur. 10115 Curran, For. Bur, 12684 Rosenbluth & Tamesis, For. Bur. 11721 Whitford, For. Bur. 13349 Tamesis: Province of Tayabas, For. Bur. 7095 Kobbe, May 1907, in flower, For. Bur. 10385, 10390 Curran, For. Bur. 11510 Whitford, For. Bur. 18653 Darling, For. Bur. 23002 Aguilar: Province of Camarines, For. Bur, 4532 Barredo, For. Bur. 10459 Curran: Province of Albay, For. Bur. 15070 Rosenbluth: Province of Sorsogon, For, Bur. 4525 Lschokke, For. Bur. 5751 Pray. MInporo, For. Bur. 7147 Merritt. LEYTE, For. Bur. 12728 Rosenbluth. MINDANAO, Prov- ince of Misamis, For. Bur. 15472 Pray: District of Davao, For. Bur. 11557 Whitford. Native names: mangachapuy (Tag., V.), dalindingan (Tag.), barosingsing (Tloe.). Sect. II. DryoBALaNorpes. Secondary nerves numerous, approximate, not prominent, and often obscure. Stamens 15. Stylopodium in some species wanting, indicated by a hairy ring. 9. Hopea pierrei Hance in Journ. Bot. 15 (1877) 329; Brandis in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. 31 (1895) 67, pl. 2, f. 10; Foxworthy in Philip. Journ. Sci. 4 (1909) Bot. 515; Whitford in Philip. Bur. For. Bull. 102 (1911) 76. H. micrantha Hance in Journ. Bot. 14 (1876) 242, non Hook. f. in Trans. Linn. Soc. 23 (1862) 161. Hancea pierrei Pierre Fl. For. Gochinch. (1891) ¢. 248. Medium-sized trees ; branchlets glabrous, only petioles and ramifications of inflorescence slightly puberulous ; emall hairy glands (domatia) usually found in axils of secondary nerves. Flowers drooping, pedicellate, in unilateral racemes, these distichous and regularly alternating, forming short axillary racemose panicles. Bracteoles ciliate. Calyx glabrous ; petals sericeous outside; awn of connective more than twice as long as the anther. Stylopodium glabrous as well as ovary, constricted below ; style very short; stigma obtuse. Fruit ovoid, slightly acuminate, very tightly enclosed by the 5 calyx-segments which are indurated at the base. Both cotyledons bifid to base, the radicular somewhat larger ; hypocotyl half the length of embryo, cotyledons filled with starch. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur. 17075, 17206, 17256 Curran: Province of Pangasinan, For. Bur. 9638 Zschokke: Province of Nueva Ecija, Bur. Sct. 13072 Fowworthy, For. Bur. 22195 Alvaree: Province of Zambales, For. Bur. 8231 Ourran & Merritt: Province of La Laguna, For. Bur. 10150, 10157 Curran, For, Bur. 15352 Tamesis, Bur. Sei. 8982 Foxworthy, For. Bur. 17638, 17645 Curran, Feb. 1910, in fruit, For. Bur, 22499, 29500 Mariano: Province of Tayabas, Whitford 792, Sept. 1904, with young flowers, For. Bur. 23018 Aguilar: Province of Camarines, For, Bur. 10719 Curran, For. Bur. 12810 Rosenbluth: Province of Albay, For. Bur. 10579, 10618 Curran: Province of Sorsogon, For. Bur. 10599, 10627 Curran. Poxt10, Bur. Sci. 10285 McGregor. MUNpoRO, For. Bur. 6726 Merritt, April 1907, in flower, For. Bur. Ag’ 711399, 12027 Merritt. Neanos, Province of idental, For. Bur. 17865 Curran. — _ Common hee ie isak (Tag.), malatagum (B.), makitarem (Sor.), lito (Sor.), mangachapuy (T., V-), pisak (Cag.). ra Distribution: Cambodia, Singapore, Borneo and the Philippines. 266 ' FOXWORTHY. 10. Hopea sp. A form which differs from H. pierrei in having usually more uniform, smaller and narrower leaves and green, short-stalked fruit. The leaves seem to be without domatia. . It is possible that some of the sterile material which has been referred to H. pierrei, may belong to this species and the next. A single collection from the Island of Sibuyan, Hlmer 12071, March 1910, in fruit. 1]. Hopea sp. This differs from H. pierrei in having a much larger fruit, which is sometime glutinous. Srpuyan, Elmer 12289, April 1910, in fruit. Luzon, Province of La Laguna, Phil. Pl. 397 Ramos, August 1910, in fruit. ees ; 4. PENTACME A. DC. Sepals strongly imbricate. Petals broad, spreading. Stamens 15. -Anthers oblong, on short broad filaments. Anther-cells equal, each pro- longed into a short appendix; the connective also prolonged, so that each anther has 5 apical appendages. Ovary glabrous, prolonged into a conical stylopodium ; style filiform, glabrous. Stigma obtuse, indistinctly 3- toothed. The three outer segments of fruiting-calyx much larger than the others, narrowed into a stalk, but expanding into a broad base, which is adpressed to the lower portion of the fruit but does not enclose it. © Four species known, two from the eastern Indian peninsula and two from the Philippine Islands. The wood is the least durable of any of our dipterocarps, but is con- siderably used because it is so abundant and readily worked and it is very satisfactory for purposes of temporary construction. There is quite a little resin present in the wood, but so far as I know, it is not used commercially. . : Pith with 12 to 25 resin-canals, Petiole with a semicircle of 7 to 9 vascular bundles, each with one resin-canal ; 3 resin-canals in the central mass. 1, Pentacme contorta (Vidal) Merrill & Rolfe in Phil. Journ, Sei. 3 (1908) Bot. 115; Merritt in Philip. Bur, For. Bull, 8 (1908) 48; Whitford in Philip. Journ. Sci. 4 (1910) Bot, 703, Philip. Bur. For, Bull. 10? (1911) 62, pls. 56, at; Foxworthy in Philip. Journ, Sci. 4 (1909) Bot. 511, 516. Shorea contorta Vidal Sinopsis Atlas (1883) xv, t. 15, f. Ej Rev. Pl. Vase. Filip. (1886) 88; Brandis in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. 31 (1895) 88; Merr. in Phil. Journ. Sei. 1 (1906) Suppl. 98; Foxworthy in Philip. Journ. Sci. 2. (1907) Bot. 386. : : fs A Pentacme paucinervis Brandis in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. 31 (1895) 733 Meret og. -& Rolfe in Phil. Journ. Sci. lc. ent ee PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. 267 Leaves glabrous, ovate, acuminate, margin undulate or entire; second- ary nerves 6 pairs; tertiary nerves parallel, not conspicuous, joined by reticulate veins. Anthers linear; appendix of connective very short. Ovary glabrous; style cylindric, articulate with ovary, stigma minutely papillose. Wings of fruiting-calyx twisted, very unequal, the two largest 7 to 13 cm long, with 10 to 12 prominent nerves, the third 6.5 em long, the others much smaller. Fruit tomentose, acuminate; base of fruiting- calyx pubescent. The number of secondary nerves is rather variable as is also the size of the fruit. This is the commonest and most widely distributed species of the family in the Islands. It is probable that it occurs in every province. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur. 7088 Klemme, For. Bur. 14726, 14734 Darling, For. Bur. 16930, 16963, 17163, 17186 Curran: Province of Isabela, For. Bur. 14840 Darling, For. Bur, 18557 Alvarez: Province of Ilocos Norte, For. Bur. 13823, 13854, 13923, 14002 Merritt & Darling: Province of Ilocos Sur, For. Bur. 14092 Merritt & Darling: Province. of Abra, For. Bur. 14663 Darling: District of Bontoc, For. Bur, 17013 Qurran: Subprovince of Benguet, For. Bur. 10804 Curran: Province of Nueva Vizcaya, For. Bur. 18411 Alvarez: Province of Pan- gasinan, For. Bur, 8282 Curran é Merritt, Por. Bur. 14364 Villamil: Province of Nueva Ecija, For. Bur. 8493. Curran, Bur. Sci. 12297 Foxworthy, For. Bur. 22888 Alvarez: Province of Tarlac, Vidal 79: Province of Bulacan, For. Bur. 11152 Aguilar, Bur. Sci. 12293 Foaworthy: Province of, Zambales, For. Bur. 5810, 5904, 6916 Curran, For, Bur. 19462 Agama: Province of Bataan, For. Bur. 504, 511, 519, 534, 536, 538, 605, 598, Barnes, Dec. Phil. For. Fl. 72 Barnes, Jan. 1904, in flower, For. Bur. 650, 653 Borden, April 1904, in flower, Whitford 293, May 1904, in flower, For. Bur. 677 Borden, May 1904, in flower, For. Bur, 821 Borden, June 1904, with immature fruit, For. Bur. 1748 Borden, Aug. 1904, mature fruit, Bur, Sci. 1555, 1626 Foxworthy, For. Bur. 5281, 5961, 17609 Curran, _ For. Bur, 6367 Curran, Mar. 1907, in flower: Province of Rizal, Vidal 987, 2167, Merrill’ 2697 Ramos, June 1903, in flower, For. Bur. 2970 Ahern’s coll., Apr. 1905, in fruit, For. Bur. $199 Ahern’s coll., July 1905, in flower, Bur, Sci. 109 Foaworthy, Bur. Sci. 1464 Ramos, Bur. Sei. 3258 Ramos, June 1907, in fruit, For. Bur. 10009, 10036, 10042 bis Curran, Bur. Sci. 4635 Ramos: Province of La Laguna, For. Bur. 7902 Ourran & Merritt, For. Bur. 22232 Mariano: Province of Tayabas, For. Bur. 6070 Kobbe, For. Bur. 10175, 10398 Curran, For. Bur. 11504 Whitford, Por. Bur. 14990, 18690 Darling, Oct., Dec. 1900, im fruit: Province of Camarines, For. Bur. 10447, 10735 Curran, For. Bur. 10659 Curran, June 1908, in flower, For. Bur. 10721 Curran, July 1908, in flower, For. Bur. 18356 Aguilar, For. Bur. 14337 Aguilar, July 1909, with immature fruit: Prov- ince of Albay, For. Bur, 10593, 10615 Curran: Province of Sorsogon, age . Bur. 5168 Bridges, For. Bur. 10559 Curran, June 1908, in flower. PorILLo, For. Bur. 8217 Hagger, July 1904, fruit, Bur. Sci. 6831 Robinson, Aug. 1909, fruit, Bur. Sei. 10379 McGregor. Maxinpuque, For. Bur. 12155 Rosenbluth. MASBATE, Merrill 2772 Barnes, June 1903, in flower. Muxnono, Whitford. 1506, Per oe 4480 Merritt, June 1906, in flower, For. Bur. 9910 Merritt, April 1908, immature fruit, For. Bur. 8682, 12012 Merritt. Samar, For. Bur. 12858, 12651 Rosenbluth. _ Necros, For. Bur. 17349, 17417, 17487 QCurran, For. Bur. 17367, " 7432 Curran, : Sept. 1909, in fruit. MINDANAO, Subprovince of Agusan, Bet Bur. 1397 H a8 ' 8on: District of Davao, For. Bur. 11564 Whitford: District of Lanao, Mrs. Cle- 268 FOXWORTHY. mens 247, Feb. 1906, in flower: District of Zamboanga, For. Bur. 9042, 9184 Whitford & Hutchinson. Bastran, For. Bur, 4004 Hutchinson, Feb. 1906, with immature fruit, For. Bur. 4813 Hutchinson, July 1906, fruit. This species has been collected in flower in the months of January, February, March, April, May, June, and July, and in fruit in the months of February, April, June, July, August, September, October, and December. Native names: lawan (Tag.), balac (Cag. Negrito), apnit (Cag., Iloc.), baloe- bac (Negrito), malaanonan (Tag.), danlig (V.). 2. Pentacme sp. Leaves broadly oblong, shortly and abruptly acuminate, base rounded; stipules 2 to 3 cm long, 7 to 8 mm wide, lanceolate or oblanceolate ; secondary nerves about 15 pairs. Young shoots, petioles and underside of leaves covered with a grayish tomentum. Wood soft and white, with much the same structure as that of P. contorta but finer-grained. Bark dark and fissured. A tree of the low flat forest near the beach. Luzon, Province of Tayabas, For. Bur. 10333 Curran. This form seems to show some points of resemblance to Pentacme siamensis Kurz. 5. SHOREA Roxb. Large resinous trees; stipules in a few species large and persistent, in most small and early deciduous. Leaves chartaceous or coriaceous; sec- ondary nerves prominent; tertiary nerves mostly parallel. Flowers as a rule in unilateral spikes or racemes, these distichous and regularly alternating on the branches of large axillary and terminal panicles. Hach flower subtended by two, mostly deciduous, in a few species persistent and conspicuous, bracts. Sepals strongly imbricate, always hairy outside, and often inside also, on the margin of a broad obconical receptacle. Petals oblong, rarely ovate-oblong, hairy on the outside. Stamens gen- erally 15, in some species more. Anther-cells generally equal; connective prolonged into a pointed appendage, generally longer than the anther, sometimes short or wanting. Segments of fruiting calyx with their broad bases tightly enclosing the fruit, the three outer ones generally longer than the others and much longer than the fruit. Ripe seed generally without albumen. Cotyledons thick, fleshy, gen- erally both bifid to their base, that is to the point where they are attaehed _ to the apex of the hypocotyl (radicle) or to the petioles. : Pith with 3 to 30 perimedullary resin-canals, with now small now wide — lumen. The structure of the petiole is various; usually it shows the characteristic form ; viz., a semicircle of 7 to 9 isolated vascular bundles with alternating resin-canals and a central bundle-system without resin- — canals; in other species there is found a central bundle system with no or 1 to 3 resin-canals, x : _ The largest genus in the family} with more than 90 species, with 14 _ species in the Philippines. Of our Philippine species four, 8. balangeran, S. eximia, S. squamata, and 8. teysmanniana are extra-Philippine 1 distribution. . PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. 269 KEY TO THE PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF SHOREA. a. Leaves broadly ovate, thickly coriaceous, margins inrolled; wood soft and red. 13. 8. sp. aa. Not as above. b. Leayes distinctly lighter-colored beneath. ce, Leaves grayish or yellowish, pubescent beneath; wood very hard, yellow or brownish ...! SES OUTS Se es att RT ae ose’ 1. 8. balangeran ee, Not as above. d. Leaves retuse at the apex, coriaceous, light-colored and almost glabrous beneath ; wood light-colored and coarse-grained......... 2. 8. malaanonan dd. Leaves acute at the apex, chartaceous, with grayish pubescence of stellate hairs beneath; wood hard, fine-grained, red. G6. 8. sp. (Pubescent guijo) bb. Leaves not lighter in color beneath, usually the same on both surfaces. ’ c. Leaves usually cuneate at base. : d. Secondary nerves less than 10 pairs, domatia present.........-.---- 14. 8. sp. dd. Secondary nerves more than 10 pairs, domatia not present... 5. S. guiso ce, Leaves rounded or cordate at base. d. Stipules small and early deciduous. e. Leaves coriaceous, glabrous beneath, margins sometimes slightly in- mba cco See RE es a aerate a tee tence 10. S. polysperma 1l. S. warburgii ee. Leaves chartaceous, with pubescence of stellate hairs beneath. 3. 8. philippinensis dd. Stipules of some size and persistent, at least on young shoots. e. Stipules broadly ovoid, acute or obtuse, thickly covered with stellate hairs. : f. Leaves large, copper-color in drying... 8. S. squamata ff. Leaves small, pallid when dry... 4. 8. sp. (Saray) ee. Stipules not so broad, lanceolate, acuminate. f. Leaves lanceolate-acuminate, narrow, not prominently — stellate- ; pubescent beneath ; buds scurfy...-.-----+----------+-- 12. S. teysmanniana ff. Leaves elliptic or oblong, acuminate, prominently stellate-pubescent beneath. ‘ g. Tertiary veins thickly peset with large stellate hairs; wood fine- grained, pale-Ted ...------rs-se-crre 9. 8S. eximia gg. Tertiary. veins not so thickly t ae more coriaceous; wood coarser-grained, bright-red. % y fe Be megrosenss 1. Shorea balangeran (Korth.) Dyer ex Vidal Rev. Pl. Vase. Filip. (1886) 61; Burek in Ann. Jard. Bot. Buitenz. 6 (1887) 214; Brandis in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. 31 (1895) 86; Foxworthy in Phil. Journ. Sci. 4 (1909) Bot. 508, 516, pl. _ XXVIII, f. 67; Whitford in Philip. Bur. For, Bull. 10? (1911) 73, pl. 78. rk Hopea balangeran Korth, in Verh. Nat. Gesch. Bot. (1848) 74, ¢. 7; Miq- FL Ind. Bat. 1? (1859) 503; A. DC. Prodr. 162 (1868) 634. Parahopea balangeran Heim Recherch. Dipterocarp. ( 1892) 66. - Young branches subcompressed, with peduncles and petioles lepidote- velutinous, fulvous; leaves rounded at base, ovate-oblong, acuminate, glabrous above, clothed beneath with very fine yellowish-brown pubescence, 10 to 20 em long, 5 to 6 em wide, secondary nerves 11 to 16, tertiary not very distinct. Petiole 2.5 em long. Stipules lanceolate, acutish, stellate- 270 FOXWORTHY. pubescent on both sides. Racemes equalling or shorter than the leaves. Braects subrotund, glabrous within, pubescent and ciliate without, yellow, 4 mm long, 3 mm wide. Calyx laciniae lanceolate, outside covered with simple, adpressed, cinereous, sericeous hairs, glabrous within. Petals three or four times as long as the calyx, oblong, glabrous within, sericeous without. Stamens 15; appendix to connective sometimes longer than the anther cells. The three larger segments of the fruiting calyx oblan- ceolate, obtuse, 6-nerved, transverse veins distinct, margin minutely ciliate, clear, base dilated, sparsely villous with stellate hairs. Fruit ovoid, acuminate. Only the immature fruit has been described. None of our collections are in fruit and only one in flower. The sterile material shows a very great range of variability in shape and texture, and it is altogether probable that the following list contains representatives of what will prove to be several distinct species when we have more complete material for study. From observations made by different foresters it seems that this species and Hopea plagata produce wood of almost the same quality and ap- pearance, but that the trees may be distinguished by the bark, which is thick, black and coarsely furrowed in H. plagata and thin, gray and not coarsely furrowed in this species. Both furnish a high grade of the timber known as yacal, which corresponds very closely to the selangan batu of Borneo and the thingan of Burma. Luzon, Province of Pangasinan, For. Bur. 8278, 8279 Curran & Merritt, For. Bur. 9635 Zschokke, For. Bur. 13478, 13487 Medina, For. Bur. 14390 Villamil: Province of Zambales, For. Bur. 6507 Aguilar, For. Bur. 6931 Curran, For, Bur. 11045 Zschokke, For. Bur. 13208, 13204, 13205 Cortes, For. Bur. 19469 Agama: Province of Tayabas, For. Bur. 1, 5 Ware, For. Bur. 6065 Kobbe, For. Bur. 7096 Kobbe, May 1907, in flower, For. ‘Bar: 12501 Rosenbluth, For. Bur. 18651 Darling, Bur. Sci. 18117, 13118, 13119, 13120 Foxworthy & Ramos: Province of Camarines, Por. Bur. 10648, 10647, 10674, 10730 Curran, For. Bur. 11519, 11522, 11525 Whit- ford, For. Bur. 13852 Aguilar: Province of Albay, Cuming 884, For. Bur. 15002 Aldor, For. Bur. 18716 Darling. Leyre, For, Bur. 12732, 12899 - Rosenbluth. MINDANAO, District of Davao, For. Bur. 11562 Whitford: District of Zamboanga, For. Bur, 9031 Whitford & Hutchinson. : Common names: yacal, guisoc, guisoc-amarillo, guisoc-guisoc, ses die yamban puti. Distribution: Borneo; Madjang; Bangka; the Philippines. 2. Shorea malaanonan (Blanco) Blume in Mus, Bot. Lugd.-Bat. 2 (1856) 34; A. DC. Prodr. 16 (1868) 631; Brandis in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. 31 (1895) 103; Foxworthy in Phil. Journ. Sei. 2 (1907) Bot. 386; Merrill & Rolfe in Phil. Journ. Sei. 3 (1908) Bot. 115; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 21; Whitford in. Philip. Bur. For. Bull. 107 (1911) 64. Mocanera malaanonan Blanco FI. Filip. (1837) 858. Dipterocarpus malaanonan Blanco Fl. Filip. ed. 2 (1845) 312. Shorea polita Vidal Sinopsis Atlas (1883) xv, t. 15 f. D; Rev. Pl. Vase. ip ae (1886) 61; Brandis 1. c. 88; Merrill & Rolfe I. ¢. 115. Buphorid: vedlamndian Bisneo: Fl. Filip. ed. 1 (1837) 286 (289 ophelis Peery phoria ? nephelium Blanco FI. Pie. ed. 2 (1845) 200. PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. 271 A translation of Blanco’s original description for Mocanera malaanonan is as follows: Leaves ovate, lanceolate, broad, abruptly pointed, whitish beneath. Calyx divided almost to the base into five oblong parts, con- stricted a little above the fruit; the three exterior more than 7.5 em long. Fruit oval, free at maturity, surrounded by the calyx, outer covering fragile, crowned with a long style, which bears three stigmas, and with a seed of three or four lobules in a compartment. Trees of some diameter, known at Angat by the rather equivocal name of mala- anonang ; the leaves have a length of a span, they are broad and the new ones are whitish and soft beneath. This distinguishes it sufficiently from other members of the genus. The tree also gives an odorous resin, but in small quantity. ‘ Vidal’s description of S. polita evidently refers to a narrower form and is as follows: Leaves lanceolate-elliptic, acute at apex, rounded at base, the margin somewhat undulate ; leaf blade 6 to 12 cm by 2 to 4 cm, petiole 2 to 3 cm; lateral nerves 12 to 15 pairs, slightly ascending (about 60°) not very distinct, very smooth in the interspaces. Fruiting calyx of a brilliant gray, the part which envelops the nut very round, with three long, usually unequal (5 to 8 cm) wings and 2 short and narrow (3 cm) reddish-yellow which are much reticulated and with about 10 nerves. : It seems that a narrow-leaved and a proad-leaved form of malaanonang are recognized by the natives, but they seem to be connected by inter- mediate forms and it is for that reason that the two are here classed as - one species. Closely resembling S. coriacea Burck but with larger and more nearly glabrous fruit. Perhaps the same species which was described as 8S. hypocra by Hance from Cochinchina, but usually with a smaller number of secondary nerves. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur. 4279 Klemme, June 1906, in fruit: Province of Ilocos Sur, For. Bur, 13039 Paraiso: Province of Nueva Ecija, For. Bur. 8450, 8480 Curran, For, Bur. 22103 Alvarez: Province of Pangasinan, For. Bur. 12979, 12980 Alvarez, May 1910, in fruit: Province of Zambales, For. Bur. 6023 Aguilar: Province of Rizal, Vidal 71, 2155, 2166, 2168, For. Bur. 2685 Ahern’s coll., Jan. 1905, in flower, For. Bur. 2990 Ahern’s coll., Apr. (1905, in flower and fruit, Bur. Bet, 1420 Ramos: Province of Tayabas, For. Bur. 3233 Hagger, Feb. 1905, in flower. , The following numbers represent the nar description of 8. polita: oN ae I oe Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur. 11306 Klemme, Apr. 1908, with im- mature fruit: Province of Nueva Ecija, Vidal 989 (type): Provinee of Zambales, For. Bur. 5915 Ourran: Province of Rizal, For. Bur. 436 Ahern’s coll., psa 1004, in flower, For. Bur. 1168 Ahern’s coll., June 1904, in flower, doker 8609. Feb, 1906, in flower: Province of Tayabas, Merrill 2851 Clark & Barnes, Apr. row-leaved form and seem to fit Vidal’s 1903, in flower, Merrill 2589 Ware, June 1903, in fruit, For. Bur. — out : _ Common names: malaanonan (Tag.), danlig (Tay, Laue “ _ mangasinoro (Tay.). ; eee 4 272 FOXWORTHY. 3. Shorea philippinensis Brandis in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. 31 (1895) 88. Petioles and inflorescence pubescent with stellate hairs. Leaves elliptic, underside pubescent with stellate hairs; leaf-blade 3 to 7 cm long; petioles up to 1 cm long; secondary nerves about 10 to 12, tertiary nerves inconspicuous. Bracts enclosing the buds subpersistent; anthers linear, long-aristate ; appendage filiform, longer than anther. Ovary with base of style puberulous, style filiform glabrous exceeding the ovary; stigma minute. Luzon, Province of Bulacan, Vidal 983: Province of Bataan, For. Bur. 717 Borden: Province of Tayabas, For. Bur. 6068 Kobbe. Ticao, For, Bur. 12553 _ Rosenbluth. Leyre, For. Bur. 12885 Rosenbluth. A very -imperfectly known species. All of the material in our herbarium is sterile. The wood of some of the numbers credited to this is very light-colored and soft, of some of the others it is red. It is very likely that some of the numbers are wrongly identffied. 4. Shorea sp. aff. 8. harmandii Pierre. A large tree, 30 m high and 75 cm in diameter. Wood white to brownish, soft; wood-parenchyma lines and lines of resin-canals incon- spicuous or wanting. Vessels arranged in more or less regular patterns. Wood resembling that of Pentacme in appearance. Leaves elliptic, coria- ceous, pallid above and beneath when dry, the very young leaves being darker in color; bluntly acuminate at apex, rounded or subcordate at base. Secondary nerves 12 to 15 pairs, tertiary nerves distinct and par- allel. Leaf-blade 5 to 9 em long, 3 to 5 cm wide. Petioles short, 8 to 9 mm long, and pubescent. Stipular bracts enclosing the bud, triangular- ovate, rather large and semipersistent, with several longitudinal nerves. Stipules leaving a very distinct scar on falling. Twigs dark-colored, pubescent, with short internodes. Fruit ovoid, about 1 cm long and about the same diameter, enclosed by the bases of the calyx-lobes; the 3 long calyx-wings oblong-spatulate, 7 em long, 16 mm wide, with 10 to 12 longitudinal and numerous cross veins, the 2 short calyx-wings 4 to 6 em long and 5 to 6 mm wide, with only 5 or 6 longitudinal nerves. Fruit green when fresh, reddish-brown when dry. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur. 17158 Curran, Mar. 1909, in frit, For. Bur. 7084 Klemme: Province of La Laguna, For, Bur. 17652 Curran. Common names: saray (Cag.), danlig or white tiaong (Lag.), canacan (Neg.)- 5. Shorea guiso (Blanco) Blume Mus. Bot. Lugd-Bat. 2 (1856) 34; Vidal Sinopsis Atlas xv, t. 15, f. OC; Perk. Frag. Fl, Philip. (1904) 23; Brandis in Journ. Linn, Soe. Bot. 31 (1895) 89; Merr. in Phil. Journ. Sei. 1 (1906) Suppl. 98; Foxworthy in Phil. Journ. Sci. 2 (1907) Bot. 355, 357, 383, 384, 4 (1909) Bot. 419, 509, 517, pl. XXVII, f. 70; Everett & Whitford in Philip. Bur. For. Bull. § (1906) 16; Merritt & Whitford in Philip. Bur. For. Bull. 6 (1906) 36; Merritt in Philip. Bur. For. Bull. 8 (1908) 48; Whitford in Philip. Journ. Sei; 4 (1910) Bot. 703, Philip. Bur. For. Bull. 102 (1911) 71, pls. 74, 79 Bur. 19565 Rosenbluth, For. Bur. 21002 Darling. MrNvoRo, PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. is Mocanera guiso Blanco FI. Filip. ed. 1 (1837) 449. Dipterocarpus guiso Blanco Fl. Filip.ed. 2 (1845) 313. Anisoptera guiso A. DC. Prodr. 16? (1868) 616. 8. vidaliana Brandis 1. ¢. 83. Leaves chartaceous, ovate-lanceolate, acute or acuminate, base rounded or cuneate, glabrous or nearly so. Secondary nerves 15 to 18 pairs. Leaf-blade 7 to 15 cm long, 2 to 6 cm wide; petiole 1 to 3 cm long. Flowers described by Blanco as having 30 stamens. Fruit with three wings which are 2.5 to 3 em long and 4 to 8 mm wide; the two short wings 15 to 20 mm long, 2 to 4 mm wide, linear or spatulate ; fruit 4 to 6 mm in diameter and about 6 to 8 mm high, slightly stouter than the fruit of S. polysperma. ‘ This species most closely resembles S. polysperma, from which it differs in its grayish bark, harder and grayer wood, usually thinner leaves which taper toward the base and are not inrolled at the margins, and the shorter and stouter fruit. The species is sufficiently variable to make any one set of characters of only comparative value and it is often ex- tremely difficult to distinguish these two species from sterile material. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur. 14730 Darling, For. Bur. 16960, 17255 Qurran: Province of Isabela, For. Bur. 14842 Darling: Province of Ilocos Norte, For. Bur. 13851, 14012 Merritt & Darling: Subprovince of Bontoe, For. Bur. 17015 Curran: Province of Abra, For. Bur. 14653 Darling: Province of Nueva Vizeaya, For. Bur. 10877 Curran, For. Bur. 18025 Merritt: Province of Nueva Ecija, For, Bur. 8439, 8466 Ourran, For, Bur. 14307 Saroca: Province of Panga- sinan, For, Bur. 8397 Ourran & Merritt, For. Bur. 13471, 13514 Medina, For. Bur. 14354, 14379 Villamil: Province of Tarlac, For. Bur. 15395 Zschokke : Province of Pampanga, For. Bur. 17692, 17735 Curran: Province of Zambales, Por. Bur. 5811, 5995, 6912 Curran, For, Bur. 6081 Aguilar, Por. Bur. 19470, 19475 Agama: Province of Bataan, Merrill 1482 Garcia, For, Bur. 490, 491, 508, 530, 548, 545, 550, 558, 572, 576, 581 Barnes, Dec. Phil. Por. FI. 71 Barnes, Jan. 1904, in flower, For. Bur. 659 Borden, April 1904, in flower, For. Bur. 1179, 1398, 1525, 1530, 1538, 1559, 1572 Borden, For. Bur, 1799 Borden, Sept. 1904, in fruit, Bur. Sci. 1605, 1614, 1642 Foxworthy, For. Bur. 5276, 5954, 6374, 17522 Curran, For. Bur, 7344 Ourran, June 1907, in fruit, Por. Bur. 13542 Alvarez: Province of Bulacan, Bur. Sci. 12267 Foaworthy: Province of Rizal, Vidal 984, Por. Bur, 440, 1167, 2865 Ahern’s coll., April-June 1904-5 in flower, Por. Bur. 3088 Ahern’s coll., Bur. Sci. 20 Foxworthy, Bur. Sci. 1460 Ramos, For. Bur. 10088 Curran: Province of La Laguna, For. Bur. 19125 Tamesis, For. Bur. 22290 Mariano: Province of Batangas, For. Bur. 7687 Curran & Merritt: Prov- ince of Tayabas, For. Bur. 6056 Kobbe, For. Bur. 10174, 10269, 10329, 10375, 10393, 10400 Curran, For. Bur. 18660 Darling, Bur. Sci, 13116 Fowworthy & Ramés: Pravince-of Camarities, Aherw’ 129 Garcia, For. Bur. 4587 Barredo, For. Bur. 10461, 10670, 10704 Curran: Province of Albay, For. Bur, 15003 Aldor: Province of Sorsogon, For. Bur. 10629 Curran. tomenee? ami. rer 2 ) 4255: sen . BATE, v4, ‘ Rosenbluth. Trcao, For. Bur. 12552 Rosenbluth Pa a gery 6079, 8778, 8783, 9712, 9766, 11387, 12025 Merritt. Samar, For. Bur, 12873, 12849 Rosendluth. Leyte, For. Bur. 12799 Rosenbluth. Necros, Province of Negros 274 FOXWORTHY. Occidental, For, Bur, 17446 Qurran. Mrinpanao, Province of Misamis, For, Bur, 6546 Hutchinson, For, Bur. 15473 Pray: District of Davao, For. Bur. 11553, 11558 Whitford: District of Cotabato, For. Bur. 15409 Pray: District of Zam- boanga, For. Bur. 9005, 9485 Whi tford & Hutchinson. Basan, For. Bur: 12368 Hutchinson. Ahern 840 Sherman, collected in Mindanao in 1901, was determined by Merrill (Philip. Bur. For. Bull. 1 (1903) 40) as S. scrobiculata. It should be referred to 8. guiso. Much of our material is sterile and it shows quite a range of variation. The mature leaves are usually glabrous or nearly so; but some specimens show leaves that are sparsely hairy; and some show a development of stellaté hairs on the petioles and young shoots and on the midrib on the upper surface of the leaf. Tt is quite probable that there will prove to be more than one species in the material listed above, when we have more complete material for study and comparison. Common names: guijo, betik (Lag.), guisoc (V., Moro), sarai (Il.), yamban (IL.). 6. Shorea sp. This form differs from S. guiso principally in having a dense pubescence of grayish color on the underside of the leaves and on the twigs. The pubescence is composed of large stellate hairs, such as are found on the leaves of S. eximia, 8. squamata and 8. philippinensis. ‘The leaf-shape is very constantly that of 9. guiso and the venation seems to be much the same. The wood may be slightly harder than that of guijo. Luzon, Province of Bataan, For. Bur. s. n. Meyer, For. Bur. 6373, 17520 Curran, Bur. Sci. 10845 Foxworthy: Province of Zambales, For. Bur. 5899, 6933 Curran, For. Bur. 6506 Aguilar: Province of Pampanga, For. Bur. 17699 Curran: Prov- ince of La Laguna, For, Bur. 100%6 Curran, For. Bur. 12679 Rosenbluth & Tamesis. 7. Shorea negrosensis sp. nov. Plate XLIV. Arbor magna, 40 ad 50 m alta, 2m diametro. Folia elliptica, oblonga, vel ovata; lamina 9 ad 15 em longa, 4 ad 6 cm lata; petiolo 1.5 ad 2.5 cm longo. Nervis secondariis 12 ad 16. Stipulae parvae fugaceae. Pani- culae terminales. Petala intus glabra, extus sericea. Stamina circiter 30; filamenta subtus lata et sursum fastigata. Ovarium conoideum pilo- sum. Stylopodium 0. Stylus glaber. Gregarious in habit. Bark thick, black and fissured. Wood deep-red at the heart, the heart taking up a large proportion of the log. ‘Logs often Totten at the heart, Base of leaf rounded, apex sharply acuminate. Midrib depressed and tomentose above, prominent and pilose beneath. Secondary veins prominent on underside of leaf. Tertiary veins parallel or reticulate, distinct and with regularly spaced large stellate hairs. This — gives the underside of the leaf an appearance much like that of almon (8. eximia), but with a lesser degree of hairiness, When dried, the leaves often have a coppery color on the under surface. Stipules small, _ triangular, nerved, hairy, fugacious. Flowers in terminal panicles. Calyx and petals with dense grayish or yellowish tomentum on the outside, . PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. 275 glabrous within. Petals dark-red within. Flowers said to have a rather sickeningly sweet odor. Petals prominently longitudinally veined. Filaments black between the oblong anthers. Appendage to the con- nective tapering and shorter than the anther. Ovary bluntly conical in outline, hairy. No stylopodium. Style smooth; stigma small and ob- seurely lobed. One of the most important of our timber trees. The wood is very pretty, coarse-grained and moderately hard. It is sometimes exported under the name of “Philippine Mahogany.” This tree is most abundant in the northern part of the Island of Negros, where it occurs gregariously with almon, balachacan and bagtican. It is, perhaps, the most important commercial wood of the Philippines at the present time. The leaves of this species show close resemblances to those of 9. lepidota BL. of Sumatra, S. selanica Bl., of Amboina, and 8. platycarpa Heim, of Sarawak. For. Bur. 7281 Everett, collected in Negros Occidental in May 1907, is the type. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur. 6498 Klemme, For. Bur. 17170 Curran: Province of Isabela, For. Bur. 6644 Klemme: Province of La Laguna, For, Bur. 22811 Mariano: Province of Tayabas, Merrill 1152 Garcia: Province of Albay, For, Bur. 10620 Curran: Province of Sorsogon, For. Bur. 10601 Curran. NecRos, Province of Negros Occidental, For. Bur. 7281 Everett, May 1907, in flower (type), For. Bur. 5209, 5500 Everett, For. Bur. 5212, 7405 Danao, For. Bur. 7253 Everett, _ May 1907, in bud, For. Bur, 18583 Meyer & Foaworthy, For, Bur. 17467, 17469, 17470, 17480, 17482, 17491, 17497 Curran. Muxpanao, Province of Surigao, For. Bur, 6672 Stone, For. Bur. 7566 Hutchinson: Subprovince of Agusan, For. Bur. 7596, 7598, 7610 Hutchinson. Common names: red lauan, mangachapuy (V.). For description of habit of this species see Whitford in Philip. Bur. For. Bull. 10? (1911) 66, pls. 64, 65. 8. Shorea squamata (Turez.) Dyer ex Vidal Rev. Pl. Vase. Filip. (1886) 62; Brandis in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. 31 (1895) 92; Merr. in Phil. Journ. Sci. 2 (1907) Bot. 285; Foxworthy in Phil. Journ. Sci. 2 (1907) Bot. 386; Phil.-Journ. Sei. 4 (1909) Bot. 519; Merritt in Philip. Bur. For. Bull. 8 (1908) 16, 48; Whitford in Philip, Journ. Sci. 4 (1910) Bot. 715, Philip. Bur. For. Bull. 10? (1911) 66, pl. 63. Hopea ammale Turez. in Bull. Soc. Mose. 31* (1858) 239; A. DC. Prodr. 16* (1868) 635. Leaves coriaceous or chartaceous, from a rounded base ovate-oblong or elliptic, upper side glabrous, under side rough with tufts of stellate hair; secondary nerves 14 to 18, curved, tertiary veins parallel ; blade 10 to 20 em long, petiole 2 cm long. Flowers bibracteolate in unilateral spikes, » these distichous, in long axillary and terminal panicles, bracts oblong spathulate. Filaments of the 5 inner episepalous stamens with a thick rounded base, upon which the next 5 filaments are inserted; appendage of connective slightly longer than anther. Stylopodium smaller than - ovary; style glabrous, twice the length of stylopodium 5 stigma minute. Larger segments of fruiting-calyx 15 to 17.5 em Tong. ei 276 FOXWORTHY. The stipules are larger than in any other species of Shorea which we have and these stipules are frequently persistent and extend nearly around the stem. In some cases, it seems that the stipules drop early and this makes it more difficult to recognize the species. ‘There is great variation in the abundance of the stellate hairs. The leaves are sometimes found to be almost glabrous, but this is not very commonly the case and usually results in a very distinct form. ' Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur. 14709 Dariing, For. Bur, 17077, 17169, 17187 Curran: Province of Isabela, For. Bur. 14839 Darling: Province of Ilocos Norte, For, Bur. 13924, 13926 Merritt & Darling: Province of Nueva Ecija, For. Bur, 22152 Alvarez: Province of Bulacan, For. Bur. 11150 Aguilar, For, Bur, 15436 Cortez: Province of La Laguna, For. Bur. 10095, 17631, 17643 Ourran, Bur. Sci. 8978 Foaworthy, For. Bur. 15351 Tamesis, For, Bur, 22313 Mariano; ~ Province of Tayabas, For. Bur. 6075 Kobbe, For. Bur. 9659, 10173, 10290 Curran, For, Bur, 11511 Whitford, For. Bur. 12518 Rosenbluth, For. Bur. 18624 Darling: Province of Camarines, For. Bur. 4534 Barredo, For. Bur. 10758 Ourran: Province of Albay, Ouming 883, 892: Province of Sorsogon, For. Bur. 10604 Curran, Powtt1o, Bur, Sci. 10778 McGregor. Martnnuqur, For. Bur. 12154 Rosenbluth. Minporo, Merrill 5751, For. Bur. 8743, 6799, 6806, 6823, 11409, 11386 Merritt. Samar, For. Bur. 12839, 12860, 12881 Rosenbluth. Leyte, For. Bur, 12742 Rosenbluth. Minvanao, Subprovince of Agusan, For. Bur. 7608 Hutchinson: Province of Misamis, For, Bur. 4704 Mearns & Hutchinson, May 1906, immature fruit: District of Davao, For. Bur. 11561 Whitford: District of Lanao, Mrs. Clemens s. n., For. Bur. 15448, 15447 Pray: District of Zamboanga, For, Bur, 9242 Whitford & Hutchinson. : Common names: mayapis (Tag.), alam (Mangyan), balabak (Ib.), danlig (Tay.), lauan (Tag.), malacacao (Tay.), malakayan (Moro), malasinoro (Sam.), oghayan (Sam.), tabak (Tay.), whanan (Manobo). Distribution: Borneo and the Philippines. 9. Shorea eximia (Miq.) Scheffer in Nat. Tidschr. Nederl, Ind. 31 (1870) 349; Burck in Ann. Jard. Bot. Buitenz. 6 (1887) 218; King i Journ. Asiat. Soc. Beng. 62? (1893) 121. i Vatica % eximia Mig. FI. Ind. Bat. Suppl. (1862) 486; A, DC. Prodr. 16? (1868) 623. pee) Vatica ? sublacunosa Miq. 1. c. 486; Ann. Mus. Bot. Lag Bats 3 (1867) 85. - Shorea sublacunosa Scheffer in Nat. Tidschr. Neder]. Ind. 1. c. 350. © : ' Shorea furfuracea Miq. 1. c. 488, Ann, Mus. Bot. Lugd.-Bat. 3 (1867) 84; Rolf in Journ. Bot. 23 (1885) 210; Vidal Rey. Pl. Vase. Filip. (1886) 62; Burek 1. & \ 219; Brandis in Journ. Linn. Soe. Bot. 31 (1895) 98; Merrill in Philip. Journ. Sei. 1 (1906) Suppl. 98; Foxworthy in Philip. Journ. Sci. 4 (1909) Bot. 517; Whitford in Philip. Journ. Sci. 4 (1910) Bot. 712, Philip. Bur. For. Bull. 10° (1911) 63, pls, 58, 59. : Very large trees, which are gregarious in habit. Bark ridged, 1.5 to 2 em thick. Branchlets, stipules, petioles, underside of leaves, and branches — of inflorescence with tufts of stellate hairs, which sometimes are very long; stellate hairs most abundant on the veins ‘on the underside of the leaf. oes Stipules broad, semipersistent, triangular-ovate, as long as or shorter — than the petioles. Leaves thin, papery, elliptic-oblong, sometimes lance- olate, sometimes oblanceolate, shortly acuminate, 8 to 18 cm long, 3 to 8.5 PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. ZTE em wide. Petiole 1 to 2 cm long. Secondary nerves 14 to 22 pairs, arching ; tertiary parallel, prominent. Flowers sessile, in secund bracteate spikes, each flower subtended by two unequal bracts. Ovary pubescent, narrowed into a glabrous filiform style, much longer than ovary; stigma minute. Fruiting calyx with 3 wings 9 to 12.5 cm long, 15 mm wide, narrowed below, but base dilated, tightly enclosing the fruit: transverse veins and 7 to 9 longitudinal veins prominent. : Fruits abundantly in August, but the fruit is quickly eaten by wild hogs, etc., perhaps for contained fat, and in a very few days, it is difficult to find any of the seeds remaining. The resin is sometimes collected from the tree for torches, ete., although, I think, not on a commercial scale. The timber is used in great quanti- ties under the name of almon. Luzon, Province of Bataan, Merrill 1545 Garcia: Provinee of Tayabas, For. Bur. 11500 Whitford: Province of Camarines, For. Bur. 10716 Curran: Province of Albay, Cuming 880, in flower, For. Bur. 10577 Curran, For. Bur. 12628 Rosen- bluth: Province of Sorsogon, For. Bur. 10555, 10562, 10628 Curran. NEGROS, Province of Negros Occidental, Whitford 1579, For. Bur. 5502 Everett, For. Bur. 15017 Danao, For, Bur. 11647 Whitford, April 1909, in flower, For. Bur. 13580 Meyer & Foxworthy, Sept. 1909, fruit, For. Bur. 13686, 17466, 17479, 17490, 17498 Curran, For. Bur. 18222 Rosenbluth, Aug. 1909, fruit. MrpaNnao, Province of Surigao, For. Bur. 6673 Stone, For. Bur. 7566a Hutchinson: Province of Misamis, For, Bur. 22461 Klemme: District of Zamboanga, For. Bur. 9243, 9373 Whitford € Hutchinson, For. Bur. 12358, 12354 Hutchinson. Bastian, For. Bur. 3452, 6092 Hutchinson. . Common names: almon, white lauan. Distribution: Malacca, Singapore, Sumatra, Bangka, Dindang, Bintang, Bor- neo (Foaworthy 159, collected in the western part of Sarawak in May 1909), _ the Philippines. 10. Shorea polysperma (Blanco) Merrill in Bur. Govt. Lab. Publ. ( Philip.) 27 (1905) 22, 29 (1905) 29; Phil. Journ. Sci. 1 (1906) Suppl. 98; Foxworthy in Phil. Journ. Sei. 2 (1907) Bot. 356, 357, 394, 4 (1909) Bot. 423, 510, 518, pl. XXVII, f. 72,, Everett & Whitford in Philip. Bur. For. Bull. 5 (1906) 26; Merritt in Philip. Bur. For. Bull. 8 (1908) 16, 48; Withford in Philip. Journ. Sei. 4 (1910) Bot. 703, Philip. Bur. For. Bull. 10% (1911) 68, pls. 66, 67. Mocanera polysperma Blanco Fi. Filip. ed. 1 (1837) 448. Dipterocarpus polyspermus Blanco Fl. Filip. ed. 2 (1845) 312; A. DO. Prodr. 16* (1868) 614. Hopea tangili Blume Mus. Bot. Lugd.-Bat. 2 (1856) 35; A. DC. Prodr. 16% (1868) 635. ‘ Shorea talura F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 21, non Roxb. Hort. Beng. (1814) 3. A very large tree of the hill forests, at from 100 to 800 m above the sea, reaching a height of 50 m and a diameter of more than 2 m. Leaves ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, 8 to 11 cm long, 3 to 5 cm wide, shining, subcoriaceous, the base rounded, rarely somewhat acute, the apex usually rather long-acuminate; nerves 10 to 12 pairs, subprominent, ascending ; 1037504 278 FOXWORTHY. petioles 2 cm long, glabrous or at first pubescent. Panicles.20 cm long or less, the branches ascending, the lower ones often 15 cm long, densely pubescent with gray hairs. Flowers small, yellowish. Sepals imbricate, broadly ovate, obtuse or subacute, 3 mm long, 2.5 mm wide, densely pubescent, the three outer ones inclosing the two inner. Petals 8 mm long, 3.5 mm wide, obtuse. Stamens 15, in two series, the filaments broad, 1 mm long; anthers broadly ovate, 0.6 mm long, the appendix to the connective slender, as long as the anther. Ovary pubescent, the stylopodium very obscure or wanting. Style slender, 1.5 mm long. In the fruit all the sepals are accrescent, the three outer ones being 4.5 cm long, and 8-10 mm wide, obtuse, the two inner ones about 2 cm long or less, and 3 mm wide. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur. 17188, 17207, 17239, 17254 Curran: Province of Ilocos Norte, For. Bur. 13917 Merritt € Darling: Province of Pan- gasinan, For. Bur. 8288, Curran & Merritt, For. Bur. 14378, 14880 Villamil: Province of Nueva Ecija, For. Bur. 22156 Alvarez: Province of Bulacan, For. Bur. 11149 Aguilar, For. Bur. 15435, 15437 Cortez: Province of Bataan, For. Bur. 606 Barnes, For. Bur. 734, 784 Borden, May 1904, in flower, For. Bur, 819 Borden, June 1904, in flower, For. Bur. 1410 Borden, July 1904, in fruit, For. ‘Bur. 2130 Borden, Whitford 132, May 1904, in flower, Dec. Phil. For, Fl. 187 Borden, Bur. Sci. 1604 Foaworthy, For. Bur. 5280, 6237, 6324 Curran, For, Bur. 7221 Curran, June 1907, in flower, For. Bur. 73877 Curran, July 1907, in fruit, For. Bur, 20029 Topacio: Province of La Laguna, For. Bur, 10139, 17636 Curran, For. Bur, 15095 Cortes, For. Bur. 15355 Tamesis, For. Bur, 22498 Mariano: Province of Tayabas, For. Bur, 10373, 10403 Curran, For. Bur. 11502 Whitford, For. Bur. 12505, 12506 Rosenbluth: Province of Camarines, For. Bur. 10756 Curran, For. Bur, 11524 Whitford: Province of Albay, For, Bur, 10574 Ourran, For, Bur. 14282 Aguilar, For, Bur, 15071, 15089 Rosenbluth: Province of Sor- sogon, For. Bur. 10550 Curran. Marinpuqun, For. Bur. 12169 Rosenbluth. Minvoro, For. Bur. 6791, 6826, 8587, 8623, 8780, 9806, 11402, 11407, 11410, 12010, 12013, 12026 Merritt. Leyte, For. Bur. 15060 Rosenbluth. CxuBu, For, Bur. 6489 Espinosa, Necros, Province of Negros Occidental, Whitford 1615, For. Bur. 5503 Bverett, For. Bur. 13578 Meyer & Foaworthy, For. Bur. 13754 Fowworthy, Sept. 1909, fruit, For. Bur. 13756 Foaworthy, For. Bur. 17468, 17478 Curran. Mindanao, Province of Surigao, Long 43. 3 Common names: tangile (Tag.), abuhungan (Al.), adamui (B.), araka (il), balakbakan (Neg.), balagayan (Mangyan), damilang (Ib.), manaog (Cebu), mayapis (Tay.), pata (Pang.), maligmat (Tag.). - The name tanguile is often applied to other plants which have soft or moderately hard red wood, whether they belong to this family or not. In the provinces of Bulacan, Tayabas and Mindoro, the name tanguile is often applied to Illipe ramiflora Merr., of the Sapotaceae. Il. Shorea warburgii Gilg in Engler Bot. Jahrb. 18 Beibl, 45 (1894) 385_ Brandis in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. 31 (1895) 98; Perkins Fragm. Fl. Philip. (1904) 23. _ This is very imperfectly known and may be merely a form of 8. polysperm4 The type of S. warburgii has rather larger leaves than are common for 8 polysperma, Ro face . PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. 279 I have referred to this species For. Bur. 17067, collected in Cagayan Province, Luzon, by Mr. Curran. The two numbers credited to this species by Perkins, |. ¢, I have referred to 8. guiso. The type of the species was collected by Warburg, no. 12399, in Northern Luzon. Wood a coarse grained red lauan. 12, Shorea teysmanniana Dyer ex Brandis in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot, 31 (1895) 100; Whitford in Philip. Bur. For. Bull. 10? (1911) 68. Gordonia acuminata Vidal Rev. Pl. Vase. Filip. (1886) 58, non Shorea acu- minata Dyer. Gordonia vidalii Szysz. in Engler & Prantl Nat. Pflanzenfam. 3° (1893) 185; Merr. in Phil. Journ. Sci. 3 (1908) Bot. 114. Described by Dyer from a sterile specimen collected by Teysmann in Bangka and distributed under the name of Hopea fagifolia Miq. Leaves ovate-oblong, acuminate, pale-brownish beneath. Stipules lanceolate, slightly falcate, 2 to 2.5 em long, 5 to 8 mm broad, caducous ; secondary nerves 10 to 14 pairs, tertiary nerves parallel and not very prominent. Leaf-blade 12 to 15 cm long, 4 to 6 cm wide; petiole 1 to 1.5 em long. Differs from S. polysperma in the larger stipules and in having the midrib tomentose above. There is also the occasional development of domatia in the axils of the secondary nerves beneath. Bark not shed- ding from the mature tree in strips as in 8. polysperma. Produces an exceedingly good, fine and straight-grained, soft, red wood. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur. 17076 Curran, For. Bur. 13416 Klemme: Province of Ilocos Norte, For, Bur. 13920, 14014 Merritt € Darling: Province of Nueva Ecija, For. Bur. 22148 Alvarez: Province of Bulacan, Vidal 1146 (described by Vidal as Gordonia acuminata), Bur. Sci. 12283 Foxworthy: Proyines of La Laguna, For, Bur. 10149, 10126, 17680, 17682, 17644 Ourran, Bur. Sci. 8980, 8981, 8992 Foaworthy, Bur. Sci. 10022, 10961 Ramos, For, Bur. 15347, 15354 Tamesis, For, Bur. 15093 Cortes, For. Bur. 22308, 22310, 22501 Mariano: Province of Ta- yabas, For. Bur. 23011 Aguilar: Province of Camarines, For. Bur. 10714, 10715 © Curran: Province of Sorsogon, For. Bur. 10563 Curran. Poxi10, Bur. Sci. 10284, 10782 McGregor. : ae ' Common names: tiaong (Tag.), malaguiso (Tag.), betic (Tag.), malatiaun (Tag.), tanie (Cag.). ; _ 13, Shorea sp. For. Bur. 9432, Hutchinson, District of Zamboanga, Feb. 1908. ee ; Large leaves picked up from the ground. They are manifestly distinct from anything else which we have in the family. - Coriaceous, oblong or oblong-lanceolate, 20 to 25 em long, 5 to 8 o Ye petiole 2 em long. Margins distinctly inrolled. Secondary veins about ms Wood dark-red, coarse and straight-grained. An- exceedingly good grade 0 lauan. A coarse grained red lauan like 8. warburg??. wide; 14. Shorea sp. : Soa ; For. Bur. 9174, 9493 Whitford & Hutchinson, collected in the District of Zam- boanga, Mindanao, in Dec., 1907, and Feb., 1908, respectively. ie: te The leaves have much the appearance of those of Hopea fee rade oor Wood is a red lauan and presumably a species of Shorea. . Wood red, fine-grained. » 280 FOXWORTHY. 6. PARASHOREA Kurz. Calyx-tube very short, not enlarging. Sepals on the edge of a broad receptacle, almost valvate in bud. Stamens 12 to 15; anthers linear, on short filaments, the connective more or less prolonged ; anther cells more or less unequal, the two posterior shortly beaked. Ovary free, hairy, 3-celled ; style filiform. Fruit tomentose, acuminate. Five nearly equal wings narrowed below, not inclosing the fruit. In our species, the stipules are large, encircling the stem. Also, our species shows a distinct fold between the pairs of secondary nerves and is glaucous on the under- side of the leaf and on the young twigs. The genus has three species, one from the Eastern Peninsula of India, one from Sumatra, and the third from Borneo and the Philippines. The bark of old trees is coarsely and deeply furrowed and dark-colored. Sapwood very light-colored ; heartwood darker, often with a pinkish tinge. The wood is soft and moderately heavy and contains numerous resin- eanals, filled with a whitish resin. Trees distinctly gregarious in habit, in moist forests. Pith with 15 resin-ducts. Petiole with 5 vascular bundles in the semicircle and just as many resin-canals, central bundle-mass with no resin-canals. ___ |. Parashorea plicata Brandis in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. 31 (1895) 104; Merrill & Rolfe in Philip. Journ. Sci. 3 (1908) Bot. 114; Foxworthy in Philip. Journ, Sei. 4 (1909) Bot. 511, 516; Whitford in Philip. Journ. Sei. 4 (1910) Bot. 712, Philip. For. Bur. Bull. 107 (1911) 64, pls. 60, 61. P. warburgii Brandis 1. ¢. 105. Large trees, 20 to 40 m tall and 1 to 2 m in diamenter. Bark 1 to 2 em thick, longitudinally furrowed, dark-brown to nearly black in color. Leaves glabrous and shining above, elliptic, 6 to 15 cm long, 5 to 8 cm wide, marked by a distinct fold between the secondary nerves, similar to what is seen in many species of Dipterocarpus. In the terminal bud the young leaves are completely inclosed within the amplexicaul stipules, and the tender leaf at that stage consists almost entirely of the closely ap- - proximate secondary nerves. Stipules deciduous. Flowers 2.5 em long, on thick pedicels furrowed when dry, which are half the length of the sepals. Sepals lanceolate, slightly overlapping in bud, gray-tomentose outside, pubescent inside. Stamens 15; anthers linear, glabrous; valves nearly equal, the two posterior bluntly apiculate ; appendage of the con- _ nective longer than the anther, thick spindle-shaped, with a long point. Ovary-cells half-immersed in the broad obconical receptacle, narrowed into an elongate hairy stylopodium. The 3 outer wings of fruiting calyx broader, 8- or 9-nerved, with prominent reticulate veins between the longi tudinal nerves, similar to the venation in the fruiting sepals of the other species of the genus. : - Luzon, Province of Nueva Ecija, For. Bur, 22346 Alvarez: Province of Bu . PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. 281 lacan, For. Bur, 15438 Cortes, Bur. Sci, 12274 Foaworthy: Province of Rizal, Bur. Sci. 1461 Ramos, Bur, Sci. 2660 Ramos, May 1907, in flower, Bur. Sci, 3289 Ramos, May 1907, in fruit, For. Bur. 10010, 10016 Curran: Province of La Laguna, Vidal 990, For. Bur. 10059, 10071, 17629 Curran, For. Bur. 12775 Rosen- bluth & Tamesis, Bur. Sci. 11944 Robinson & Ramos, For. Bur, 22249, 22250 Mariano: Province of Tayabas, Merrill 1151 Garcia, Hagger 6, Merrill 51 Ritchie, For, Bur. 10176, 10377, 10404 Curran: Province of Camarines, Ahern 104 Garcia, Mar. 1902, in flower, Ahern 291, Garcia, For. Bur. 10500, 10502, 10668, 10703, 10713, 10739 Curran, For. Bur. 11520 Whitford, For. Bur. 14279, 14338 Aguilar: Province of Albay, For. Bur. 10584 Ourran: Province of Sorsogon, For. Bur. 4528 Zschokke, For. Bur, 5754 Pray, For. Bur. 10506, 10603 Curran. PoxtLto, Bur. Sci. 10282 McGregor. CaTranpuanes, For. Bur. 6679 Pray. MASBATE, Whitford 1678, For. Bur. 12570, 12591 Rosenbluth. Nearos, Province of Negros Occidental, Whitford’ 1616, For. Bur. 11194 Everett, For, Bur. 11646 Whitford, April 1909, in flower, For. Bur. 13755 Foaworthy, For. Bur, 17418, 17488 Curran: Province of Negros Oriental, For. Bur. 11244, 12314 Everett. Leyte, For. Bur. 12624 Rosenbluth, For. Bur, 11685 Whitford, For. Bur. 12769 Rosenbluth, Mar. 1909, in flower. Crsu, For. Bur. 22212 Cenabre. MINDANAO, Province of Surigao, Ahern 356 Quadras, For. Bur. 7563 Hutchinson: District of Davao, For. Bur. 11560 Whitford: District of Zamboanga, For. Bur, 9182 Whitford & Hutchinson, For, Bur, 12355 Hutchinson. The following numbers represent a form which is pubescent on the young twigs and on the underside of the leaves. ° Luzon, Province of La Laguna, For. Bur. 7904, 8051, 8050 Curran & Merritt, For. Bur. 15349 Tamesis: Province of Tayabas, For. Bur. 6047 Kobbe, For » Bur. 7851 Curran & Merritt, For. Bur. 10221 Curran, For. Bur. 14936 Darling. I have also collected this same form in the neighborhood of the Si Bode River about 30 miles southwest of Sandakan, British North Borneo, in October 1908 (no, 568). Native names: lauan (Tag.), almon (V.), apnit (S. Luz.), bagtican (V.), bayukan (Lag.), danlig (Tay.), hapnit (S. Luz.), malaanonan (Tag.), mangast- noro (Mas.), mayapis (Bal.). = VATICA Linn. Brandis (1. c. 118) characterizes the genus as follows: “Leaves as a rule coriaceous, petioles generally pubescent. Stipules mostly small, caducous. Secondary nerves distinct and limited in number, tertiary mostly reticulate. Flowers in spikes or racemes, not unilateral, arranged in terminal and axillary panicles. In some species there is what appears . to be acyme. The axis bifurcates, and there is an apparently terminal flower in the bifurcation. On closer examination it is found that what appears to be a terminal flower is the lowest lateral flower of the main axis or of the branch which has developed as strongly as the main axis. The calyx is valvate. Stamens 15, of which 10 are episepalous, standing in 5 pairs behind each other. Anthers short, glabrous ; cells very unequal, diverging at the base; appendix of connective obtuse, often very short, those of the 5 inner much longer. Ovary either free or half immersed in the obconical receptacle, often pitted, generally hairy; style cylindric, often ribbed and furrowed, mostly shorter than ovary; stigma capitate or al, shorter than fruit, or conical. Segments of fruiting calyx either equ 282 FOXWORTHY. equal and much longer than fruit, or two segments growing out into long wings. So far as known, the cells of the cotyledons filled with starch. “Pith of internode with 10 to 20 small peripheral resin-canals. Petiole; peripheral bundle-system with 3 to 10 resin-canals, the central with a few resin-canals or without them.” About 45 species known, with probably 5 species in the Philippines. Quite probably, some of the very variable material which is lumped under V. mangachapoi may be referable to other species when more complete specimens are secured. KEY TO PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF VATICA. a. Leaves chartaceous. b. Leaves broadly oval; wood light-colored and BOB cbr 4. V. sp. (calunti) bb. Leaves oblong or elliptic; wood dark-colored and hard 5. V. sp. (bagansusu) aa. Leaves coriaceous. pb. Leaves yellow beneath .......---:----esesteeeee te 3. V. sp. (guiso madlao) bb. Leaves green on both surfaces. e. Narrowly oblong or elliptic ....-----..--.---2:--- eet 1. Vatica mangachapot ec, Broadly oblong : 2. V. sp. (yacal blanco) 1. Vatica mangachapoi Blanco Fl. Filip. ed. 1 (1837) 401; A. DC. Prodr. 162 (1868) 623; Vidal Sinopsis Atlas (1883) xv, ¢. 15 B, ff. 1-6, Rev. Pl. Vase. Filip. (1886) 61; Brandis in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. 31 (1895) 134; Merr. in Bur. Govt. Lab. Publ. (Philip.) 27 (1905) 22; Phil. Journ. Sci. 1 (1906) Suppl. 98; Foxworthy in Phil. Journ. Sci. 4 (1909) Bot. 520; Whitford in Philip. Journ. Sei. 4 (1910) Bot. 703, Philip. Bur. For. Bull, 10? (1911) 76, pl. 81. Mocanera mangachapoi Blanco FI. Filip. ed. 1 (1837) 450. Vatica aptanthera Blanco Fl. Filip. ed. 2 (1845) 281. Dipterocarpus mangachapoi Blanco FI. Filip. ed. 2 (1845) 313. Pteranthera mangachapoi Blume Mus. Bot. Lugd-Bat. 2 (1856) 30. - Shorea mangachapoi (Blanco) Blume Mus. Bot. Lugd-Bat. 2 (1856) 34. Anisoptera mangachapoi A, DC. Prodr. 16? (1868) 616; Vidal Cat. Pl. Prov. Manila (1880) 18. Cotylelobium philippi Heim ms. in herb. Kew; Brandis in Journ. Linn. Soe. Bot. 1. ¢. 134. This species is very incompletely understood ; but, I have followed the interpretation accepted by Brandis. . A moderate-sized tree of the hill forests. Not gregarious. Bark light- grayish and rather smooth. Wood hard and heavy, brownish, fine-grained, resembling yacal but finer- and straighter-grained. Glabrous, excepting inflorescence and young shoots, which are clothed with stellate tomentum. Stipules small, caducous. Leaves pale on both sides, coriaceous, lanced- late; blade 7.5 to 12.5 cm long; petiole 1 cm long. Secondary ihr % to 9 pairs; tertiary reticulate. Flowers 1 cm long, on pedicels nearly — as long as the calyx, in racemes which are not. unilateral, these anin''s” in terminal and axillary racemose panicles. Pseudoterminal flowers _ frequent between the main axis and a branch of panicle. Calyx-segm ene 2 . PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. 283 in flower more or less unequal, two larger, on both sides with gray-stellate pubescence. Petals linear-oblong, obtuse, hairy outside. The five interior stamens on filaments longer than anthers, the ten outer on very short filaments; prolongation of connective short, conical. Ovary more or less immersed in the receptacle, tomentose with stellate hairs; style glabrous, 5-ribbed ; stigma of five conical lobes, the two larger segments of fruiting-calyx 5 cm long, linear-oblong, narrowed at both ends, with five longitudinal nerves joined by oblique veins. Fruit (not ripe) globose, tomentose, 4 mm in diameter, the three cells still visible, one ovule more developed than the others. Blanco describes this species as having three seeds in the ripe fruit. This is incorrect. He must have been examining the unripe fruit and looking at the ovules, only one of which develops into a mature seed. Fruiting calyx with 2 long wings, 3.5 to 4 cm long, 12 to 18 mm wide, with about 5 principal longitudinal nerves; the three shorter wings of the fruiting-calyx 10 to 18 mm long, 3 to 4 mm wide, with 3 or 4 principal longitudinal veins. Wings membranous or chartaceous. This species contains very little resin. The bark is thin and dry and presents a rather mottled appearance. Closely resembling Vatica astrotricha of Cochin-China. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, For. Bur, 17070 Curran: Province of Ilocos Norte, For. Bur. 13995 Merritt & Darling: Province of Ilocos Sur, For. Bur. 5654 Klemme, For. Bur. 7110 Klemme, Apr. 1907, in flower, For. Bur. 13019 Paraiso: Subprovince of Benguet, For. Bur. 10800 Curran: Province of La Union, Elmer 5737, Feb. 1904, in flower: Province of Pangasinan, For, Bur. 8337 Curran € Merritt, For. Bur. 12982 Alvarez, For. Bur. 13452, 18518, 13524 Medina, For. Bur: 19457 Agama: Province of Tarlac, Vidal 68, 75: Province of Nueva Ecija, Vidal 988, For. Bur. 22147 Alvarez: Province of Zambales, Warburg 13430: Province of Bataan, For. Bur. 807, 815 Borden, For. Bur, 804 Borden, May 1904, in flower, For, Bur. 1593 Borden, Aug. 1904, in fruit, Merrill 3896, Aug. 1904, in fruit, Whitford 306, May 1904, in flower, Whitford 1224, Apr. 1905, in flower, Bur, Sci. 1556 Foxworthy, For. Bur. 12399 Curran & Merritt, For. Bur. 17521, 17600 Curran: Province of Rizal, Vidal 69, 70, 72, 78, 74, For. Bur. 483 Ahorw's coll., Apr. 1904, in flower, For. Bur. 1097 Ahern’s coll., May 1904, in fruit, For. Bur. 1143 Ahern’s coll., June 1904, in flower, For. Bur. 2164 Ahern’s coll., Dee. 1904, in flower, For. Bur. 2866, 2885 Ahern’s coll., Mar. 1905, in flower, For. Bur, 2987 Ahern’s coll, Apr. 1905, in fruit: Province of La Laguna, For. Bur. 17654 Curran, For. Bur. 15092 Cortes: Province of Tayabas, Merrill 1004 Gareia, Aug. 1903, in flower and fruit, Merrill 1073 Garcia, Sept. 1903, in fruit, For. Bur, 14989, 18645 Darling: Province of Camarines, For. Bur. 10691 Curran, June 1908, in flower, For. Bur. 12702 Rosenbluth: Province of Albay, For. Bur. 15083 Rosenbluth. Leyte, For. Bur. 12733 Rosenbluth. Minpanao, District of Davao, For, Bur, 11563 Whitford: District of Zamboanga, For. Bur. 9043 Whitford Hutchinson, i Cee Common names: karig (Tag.), aniga (Ben.), aningat (Pang.), dangi (Riz.), labang (Tloe.), karig (Chab.), saungan (Leyte), tapurao (V-), yacal blanco (Tag.), dagam (Bicol), duyong (Tag.), cariocan (Tag-), tiranlay (Pang.), putt - yan (Pang.), banic (Cag.). 3 284 FOXWORTHY. 2. Vatica sp. Yacal blanco. This distinct form is represented by the following sterile numbers in our collection: Luzon, Province of Tayabas, For. Bur. 11509 Whitford, June 1908: Province of Camarines, For. Bur. 11521 Whitford, June 1908. Poritto, Bur. Sci. 10783 McGregor, Nov. 1909. The leaves are much larger than those of V. mangachapoi and the petioles are rather dark-colored. Seems to resemble V. bantamensis. 3. Vatica sp. Guisoc madlao. This is represented by the following sterile material in our collection : Leyte, For. Bur. 12781, 12782 Rosenbluth, Feb. 1909. : The leaves are very large, oblong and distinctly yellow on the under side. They have some slight resemblance to the leaves of V. rassak. 4. Vatica ? sp. Calunti. This is represented by three sterile specimens, collected by Whitford & Hutchinson on the Zamboanga peninsula. The wood is soft and white and distinctly different from any other Vatica material which I have seen. The leaves rather resemble some of the Pachynocarpus material and they may belong in that genus. Minpanao, District of Zamboanga, For. Bur. 9076, 9130, 9372 Whitford é Hutchinson, Dec. 1907, Jan. 1908. 5. Vatica sp. ° Bagansuso. Leaves chartaceous, oblong, oblong-lanceolate or elliptic-oblong, 12 to 16 cm long, 5 to 7 cm wide, shortly acuminate at apex, rounded or cuneate at base; petioles 11 to 18 mm long; secondary nerves 14 to 15 pairs ; margin of leaf slightly inrolled, and secondary nerves uniting near the margin of the leaf. Wood rather hard and very dark-colored, fine- grained, said to be more durable than molave (Vitex parviflora Juss.) and to be used for house-posts. ‘ Represented in our herbarium by a single sterile specimen collected in the Province of Misamis, Mindanao, by Mr. Klemme, For. Bur. 22465. Common name: Bagansuso (Vis.) SPECIES OF UNCERTAIN POSITION. The following numbers apparently belong to this family; but, they are reP- resented by incomplete material and I am unable,to put them in genera: For. Bur. 7580 Hutchinson, collected in Mindanao, in the Subprovince of Butuan and bearing the name of magcasino, has a wood like a red lauan; but the leaves seem to resemble a Vatica sp. For, Bur. 7581 Hutchinson, collected in Mindanao, in the Subprovinee Lg Butuan and bearing the name of guisoy, has a wood which is red and rather hard and fine-grained, like some species of Shorea; but the leaves have appearance different from anything that I have seen in that genus. For, Bur, 7583 Hutchinson, collected in Mindanao, in the Subprovince ay Butuan and bearing the name of d or dungon-d has a rather hard; w ov PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. 285 fine-grained, red wood. The leaves have a shape very much like that of some species of Dryobalanops, but the venation is different. Bur. Sci. 13141 Foaworthy & Ramos, collected near the Kabibihan River, in’ the Province of Tayabas, Luzon, in March 1911, under the name of paina. This number has immature fruit, unlike anything else that I have seen. The leaves and wood resemble Hopea plagata. ; EXCLUDED SPECIES. F.-Villar in Noviss. App. 20-21, credits Shorea floribunda Kurz, 8. parvifolia ‘DC., 8. reticulata Thwaites, Vatica grandiflora Dyer, V. scaphula Dyer, V. affinis Thwaites, to the Philippines, but without citing specimens. It seems safe to assume that he was mistaken in crediting these species to the Islands. PLaTe XXXIV. XXXV. XXXVI. XXXVII. XXXVIII. XXXIX. XL. XLI. XLII. XLITI. XLIV. ILLUSTRATIONS. Dipterocarpus pilosus Roxb., showing flower and fruit. Bur. Sci. 13123 Foxworthy & Ramos. Photograph by Cortez. Dipterocarpus affinis Brandis, from Vidal’s material in the herba- - rium at Kew. Photographs by Foxworthy. Dipterocarpus grandiflorus Blanco, fruits collected in Negros to show variation in the development of the wings. Photographs by Martin. Dipterocarpus speciosus Brandis, from Vidal 2160, in the herba- rium at Kew. Photograph by Foxworthy. Dipterocarpus sp., showing old leaves, fruits and seedling. Bur. 12395 Curran & Merritt. Photograph by Cortez. Dipterocarpus sp., showing old leaves and fruit. For. Bur. 3223 Hagger. Photograph by Cortez. Anisoptera brunnea Foxworthy. For. Bur. Photograph by Cortez. Anisoptera curtisii Dyer. graph by Cortez. Hopea basilanica Foxworthy. For. Bur. 15220 Klemme (type)- Photograph by Cortez. Hopea mindanensis Foxworthy. For. Bur. 9029 Whitford & Hutchinson (type). Photograph by Cortez. Shorea negrosensis Foxworthy. For. Bur, 7281 Everett (type). Photograph by Cortez. ; For. 11292 Klemme (type). Bur. Sci. 8985 Foxworthy. Photo- 987 VI, No. 4. [PHIL. Journ. Sct., VoL. PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. ] FoXWoRTHY : lee scm OP: Sed Bal Bee pee oe A Piate XXXIV. DIPTEROCARPUS PILOSUS Roxs. FoxworRTHY: PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE.] [PHIL. JourRN. Sct., Vou. VI, No. 4 :- Ptate XXXV. DIPTEROCARPUS AFFINIS Branois. FOXWORTHY : PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. ] [PHIL. JouRN. Scr., Vou. VI, No. 4. Piate XXXVI. DIPTEROCARPUS GRANDIFLORUS Bianco. FoXWORTHY : PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. ] [PHIL. Journ. Sct., Vou. VI, No. 4. & ¥ 2 bj ee , Piate XXXVII. DIPTEROCARPUS SPECIOSUS Branois. FOXWORTHY: PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. ] [PHIL. JourRN. Sci., Vou. VI, No. 4. PiaTE XXXVIII. DIPTEROCARPUS sp. FoxwortTHyY : PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. ] [PuHIu. Journ. Sct., Vou. VI, No. 4 Piate XXXIX. DIPTEROCARPUS sp. FOXWORTHY: PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. ] [PHIL. JourN. Sct., Vou. VI, No. 4 : N. i «VI; Nora. Piate XL. ANISOPTERA BRUNNEA Foxw. FoXWORTHY : PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. ] [PuHIL. Journ. Scr., Vou. VI, No. 4. Piate XLI. ANISOPTERA CURTISI! Dyer. FoxworTHY: PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. ] [PuHtu. Journ. Sct., Vou. VI, No. 4 i yi 3 . VI, No. 4. wd)! a Piate XLII]. HOPEA BASILANICA Foxw. FOXWORTHY: PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. | 15 CM eee ere ae [PHIL. JouRN. Scr., Vou. VI, No. 4. ae Tarenaing a Piate XLII]. HOPEA MINDANENSIS Foxw. FOXWORTHY: PHILIPPINE DIPTEROCARPACEAE. ] [PHIL. JouRN. Scr., Vou. VI, No. 4 Ptate XLIV. SHOREA NEGROSENSIS Foxw. ‘THE PHILIPPINE JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, C. Borany. Vol. VI, No. 4, September, 1911. A NEW SPECIES OF SCHIZOSTACHYUM. By J. Sykes GAMBLE. (Highfield, East Liss, Hants, England.) Schizostachyum Fenixii Gamble sp. nov. Frutex scandens. Folia chartacea, glabra, lineari-lanceolata, apice longe setaceo-acuminata, basi inaequaliter contracta et rotundata, mar- ginibus scabra, 30 ad 35 cm longa, 4 ad 5 em lata; nervi infra conspicui utrinque 10 ad 12; glandulae transversae conspicuae, obliquae ; petiolus brevissimus corrugatus, vix 3 mm longus; vaginae striatae, ore auriculis rotundatis aliquando ad 5 mm longis et fimbriis albis saepe 7 ad 8 mm longis instructae ; ligula brevis longe ciliata. Flores in paniculis floriferis longissimis ramosis ramulis brevibus vix 8 ad 10 cm longis; rhachis gracilis conspicue puberulus, glomerulis ad nodos multifloris vaginatis; vaginae stramineae cito caducae. Spiculae uniflorae in glomerulis multae fertiles, 6 ad 8 mm longae, acuminatae, additis etiam multis imperfectis et bracteis pubescentibus glumaceis ; glumae steriles 2 ovatae mucronatae, I 4 mm longa, nervis 9 et apice dense hirsuta, II 5 ad 6 mm longa, nervis 9 et apice parce hirsuta, marginibus ciliatis; florens 6 mm longa, margine ciliata enervis, glabra; palea convoluta, glabra, 7 mm longa, enervis; lodiculae 3, conspicuae, ovato-acuminatae, marginibus et dorso sericeo-villosae, 3 ad 4 mm longae. Stamina 6, linearia, libera, filamenta complanata, antherae 4 mm longae, basi inaequales, apice acumine conspicuo villoso, 2 mm longo munitae. Ovarium glabrum in stylum longum hirsutum attenuatum stigmatibus 3 recurvis plumosis. Caryopsis ovoideus 9 mm longus, 6 mm diametro, siccitate niger, apice mucronatus, basi glumis persistentibus suffultus ; pericarpium tenue, facile solutum ; semen pericarpio conforme, carnosum. Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, Sablan, BE. Fénia, December, 1910. A large quantity of material was collected which has been sent to Herr A. Kneucker, Karlsruhe, Baden, Germany, for issue in his “Gramineae Exsiceatae.” : This ies comes nearest to Schizostachywm luzonicum Gamble; its most . prominent distinguishing characters are its larger leaves with large fringed auricles, and the long hairy anther-tips. a THE PHILIPPINE JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, C. Borany. : Vol. VI, No. 4, September, 1911. URTICACEAE FROM THE SARAWAK MUSEUM. By C. B. Ropinson. (From the Botanical Section of the Biological Laboratory, Bureau of Science, Manila, P. I.) , At my request, Mr. J. C. Moulton, Curator of the Museum, Sarawak, Borneo, has permitted me to examine the collections in the possession of that institution belonging to this family. Among these are several species hitherto unreported from any part of Borneo. The comparison with Philippine species has shed considerable light on the affinities of the latter, for although specific identity between the plants of the family from the two countries is unusual, the general aspect of the Bornean plants is such that they might well have come from some unexplored locality in the southern Philippines. There are several undescribed species in the collection, but I have left these so whenever there seemed to be the least doubt, from the lack of staminate or pistillate material, as to the genus or the alliance within the genus. FLEURYA Gaudich. Fleurya interrupta (Linn.) Gaudich. Bot. Voy. Uran. (1826) 497. Near Kuching, Haviland; Rejang. Abyssinia to Polynesia. LAPORTEA Gaudich. There are in Philippine species two types of pistillate inflorescence. One is represented only by L. luzonensis Warb. and L. anacardioides C. B. Rob., with the possible addition of L. venosa Elmer, of which the pistillate inflorescence is unknown. In these the individual flowers are pedicelled, and the 4 perianth-segments are not exactly alike but can not be called strongly unequal, one pair is usually somewhat narrower than “the other but with some variation in this respect. As for the pedicels, judging from herbarium material, they may or may not become succulent : when they do, pressure in drying may cause them to appear succulent or even winged. I have previously stated’ that all our species belong in the section Dendrocnide, as limited by Weddell. This is correct, as L. - sqhis Journal § (1910) Bot. 477. 2s 292 ROBINSON. anacardioides certainly belongs with L. luzonensis, which Weddell made a variety of L. crenulata Gaudich., and with the exception, probably temporary, of L. venosa there is no doubt concerning the others. On two adjoining attached fruits on the type sheet of L. anacardioides it is possible to get characters which if isolated would suggest three different sections. The perianth is subequal (§ Dendrocnide) ; the apical half of one pedicel is botuliform-thickened (§ Sarcopus) ; its basal half is eylindric (§ Dendrocnide) ; the other pedicel is flattened (§ Sclepsion). Taken in conjunction with other material, plates, and descriptions, it does not seem possible to retain these species in Dendrocnide, but there - is not sufficient material here from outside regions to decide whether they might be placed under Sclepsion by enlarging its limits, or whether they should form a new section. As for our other species, they are all allied to L. stimulans (Linn. f.) Miq., and on a very extreme view might be made varieties of it, from deliberate judgment or more likely in despair, but assuredly no candid worker would take such a step without a de- termined attempt to find constant characters for separation, even (or, it may be, especially) if he had the Philippine collections alone. I am quite convinced that all the species indicated as distinct from one another in my recent paper are really so, except that L. subpeltata C. B. Rob., is almost certainly no more than an extreme form of L. mindanaensis Warb. On the other hand, two of these almost certainly extend to Borneo. But emphatic protest is made against placing L. luzonensis with L. crenulata, as was done by Weddell, or with L. stimulans, as suggested by Stapf,’ in discussing material from Mount Kinabalu, duplicates of which are in the Sarawak Museum collections. Sueh of the Bornean plants as bear pistillate inflorescences come within the limits of Dendrocnide, but a staminate collection has certain other characters which indicate it as referable to a species of another section. Laportea peltata (Bl.) Gaudich. Bot. Voy. Uran. (1826) 498. : Foot of Mount Braang, Haviland 347, staminate. The specimen agrees well with the descriptions of Weddell* and Smith,‘ but the leaves are rather obovate than ovate, and the basal nerves hardly reach beyond the middle of the leaf, differences which may be of little significance in the genus. The species is veTy distinct from any in the Philippines. i ~ Java, Timor, not previously reported from Borneo. Laportea lanaensis C. B. Rob. in Philip. Journ, Sci. 5 (1910) Bot. 483. Limbang, Hewitt. The inflorescences are somewhat damaged, but the plant is a very close match for the type of the above species, except for slight differences in the stipules. : . Mindanao, * Trans. Linn. Soc. Bot. II 4 (1894) 227. *DC. Prodr. 16* (1869) 80. *Koodr. & Val. Bijdr. Boomsort. Java 12 (1910) 678. a a! URTICACEAE FROM SARAWAK MUSEUM. | 293 Laportea mindanaensis Warb. in Perk. Frag. Fl. Philip. (1903) 168. Mount Kinabalu, at 5,000 feet elevation, Haviland 1222. This, referred by ‘Stapf to L. stimulans Migq., is not typical of the above species, as the leaf-bases are more attenuate than is usual in Philippine material, and the venation is less arthed, but some of our collections are nearly in agreement on the first of these characters and quite so on the second, while there seem to be no other differences. Laportea sp. Mount Kinabalu, Kadamaian, at 4,500 feet elevation, Haviland 1230. This is very close to L. gracilipes Elmer, but the leaf-bases are very acute, the veins more numerous, and the lowest of them less prolonged. JL. gracilipes seems to approach closer to L. stimulans than does any other Philippine species, but seems to be a much more glabrous plant with smaller leaves less numerously veined, laxer inflorescence, and slightly shorter bracts. -Laportea sp. Mount Kinabalu, Penokok, at 3,000 feet elevation, Haviland 1331, staminate, is probably the collection cited by Stapf as 1341, as the locality and description entirely agree. This has some resemblance to L. anacardioides C. B,. Rob., but is not close to it, and is still further removed from any other Philippine species. Laportea sp. : Without locality, Garai 991, staminate, is quite distinct from any Philippine . but r bles L. mindanaensis as much as any other. rr Laportea sp. ; Matang, at 2,000 feet elevaton, Haviland 346; Kuching. A third sheet, with- out attached data, might well be a duplicate of the first. This is vegetatively very similar to L. subclausa C. B. Rob., but has a very different pistillate in- florescence. PILEA Lindl. Pilea pterocaulis Stapf in Trans. Linn. Soc. Bot. II 4 (1894) 227. P. crassifolia Stapf 1. ¢. 228. These are represented by the type collections from Mount Kinabalu, Haviland 1229 and 1329, the latter noted on the sheet as not the number cited by Stapf, 1339, and are valuable here for the means afforded to compare them with two Philippine species, P. benguetensis C. B. Rob. and P. intumescens C, B. Rob. P. benguetensis has much resemblance to P. crassifolia, but the stems of the former are less angled toward the apex and not at all near the base, the petioles are shorter, the lamina much more inequilateral, triplinerved instead of trinerved, these nerves are not at all exserted and paler in color, the nervules connecting the costa with the lateral nerves are even more delicate than in P. crassifolia, and the leaf-apices are more faleate. In spite of all this, the species are closely allied. a ae : P. intumescens has more superficial resemblance to P. pterocaulis, but is really much more widely separated from it than from P. crassifolia. From the em it is distinguished by the shorter internodes, the more numerous ridges - an stem, absence of wings, longer petioles, and more serrate leaves. ys ata A ; P. crassifolia, the internodes are of nearly equal Jength on the parts bids ere oe comparison is possible, although shorter toward the base of the alae 4 ant, the petioles of the latter seem stouter but in both cases give evidence of | — been succulent, and the difference may have been brought about in drying. : the thinner (at least when dry) lamina of P. intumescens is longer, nearly always 103750——5 294 ROBINSON. but not always much more acute at the base, the apex is mueh more gradually contracted into the very distinctly longer acumen, the margins differ as the two original descriptions indicate, and the crenations of P. crassifolia are propor- tionally deeper, and the lateral nerves somewhat nearer the margin in that species. The most conspicuous difference is in the color of the dried leaves, which are darker on both surfaces of the Bornean plant, the under surface being brown or : by means of the cystoliths somewhat golden-brown, the nerves nearly the same i as the rest, whereas in P. intumescens the under surface is glaucescent, the nerves the same or with a reddish-brown tinge. It is possible that fuller collec- tions might unite these two species, but on the material at present available they seem to be sufficiently distinct. P..pterocaulis has also much the appearance of P. robinsonii Elmer, but is much smaller, the leaf-margins are different, and the former is trinerved and the latter triplinerved. Pilea johniana Stapf 1. c. 227, pl. XLX, fig. D, 17-26, : Kinabalu, Haviland 1391, type collection. P. humilis C. B. Rob. differs dis- tinetly by the larger, thinner, less crowded leaves. . Pilea rigidiuscula sp. nov. : ~ Suffrutex (?), glaber: inflorescentiis pistilliferis quam petioli breves brevioribus; perianthii lobis 3, lateralibus quam intermedius multo minoribus: petiolis oppositis, saepissime uno quam alter sesquilongo, rarius conspicue inaequilongis vel aequilongis, laminis rigidiuscule char- taceis, anguste ellipticis vel lanceolatis, basi angustatis obtusis retusisque rarissime acutis, margine supra quintam basalem partem leviter dentatis, apice acuminatis, saepissime triplinerviis; stipulis parvis, orbiculari- triangularibus, caducis. Pistillate inflorescences 3.5 mm long or less, the peduncles very short or practically none, very sparingly branched, few-flowered ; pedicels very _ short: perianth-lobes 3, the intermediate oblong-lanceolate, 0.5 to 0.6 mm long, the laterals broadly ovate, about 0.3 mm long; achenes compressed-— ovoid, more or less oblique, 0.8 mm long, papillose toward the margins. From the material probably a low, branching undershrub; leaves op- posite, the petiole. of one of a pair more often about one and one half times the length of that of the opposed leaf, sometimes very unequal or almost exactly equal, 2.5 to 25 mm long, the lamina rigidly chartaceous, narrowly elliptic to lanceolate, 3 to 6.5 em long, 1 to 2 cm wide, almost equilateral except sometimes at the extreme base, the base narrowed, _ obtuse and retuse or rarely acute, the margins except toward the base — shallowly dentate, the apex forming an acumen similarly dentate about _ 6 to 8 mm long; usually definitely triplinerved, or the lateral nerves “approaching the costa near the base and one or both continued to the petiole, or very rarely trinerved, the veins connecting the lateral nerves with the costa slender, about 10 in number but often connected with slender intermediate nerve, the lateral nerves continuous to the base the acumen; upper surface of lamina dull-green with greatly crowded conspicuous cystoliths, under surface much paler, with equally crowded URTICACEAE FROM SARAWAK MUSEUM. 295 but shorter and less conspicuous cystoliths ; stipules orbicular-triangular, less than 1 mm long, caducous. : SaRAWAK, Mount Koum, on limestone, Kalong 1721. The species seems to find much its closest ally in P. rigida ©. B. Rob., of northern Luzon, both appearing to be small plants with stems woody at least at the base, small and similar leaves, and greatly reduced pistillate inflorescences. But the stems of P. rigida are strongly angled while those of P. rigidiuscula are terete, the leaves of the former are much more definitely trinerved and their leaf-margins more sharply toothed. Pilea sp. Mount Kinabalu, at 5,000 feet elevation, Haviland 1305, staminate. This is probably an undescribed species in the alliance of P. melastomoides (Poir.) Wedd., but the staminate inflorescences are much shorter than the petioles, the petioles are very long, the leaves large and wider proportionately than on any of the ' Philippine plants referred to that species, the leaves are almost 5-nerved, but the outermost pair is very much more slender than the inner and prolonged less than one-third the length of the leaf. The specimen hardly furnishes sutfficient criteria of the comparative length of the petioles and size of the leaves. ELATOSTEMATOIDES ©. B. Rob. Elatostematoides sp. Niah, Haviland & Hose 3318. From its habit, this is almost certainly a species of this genus, but only staminate flowers are present, and there is no proof that it is not a Pellionia. The leaves are almost exactly the same as those of H. thibaudianum (Wedd.) C. B. Rob. (Llatostema rostratum Miq. non Hassk.), but the inflorescence is very different, borne on long branching peduncles instead of being sessile. ; Elatostematoides sp. ¥ : : Rejang, Belaga, No. 2187, collector not named on label, staminate. ; This has much resemblance to EB. robustum (Hallier f.) C. B. Rob., differing in the larger, glabrous leaves, and the shorter stipules. It is probably an. undescribed species, but is left with that status for the same reason as the preceding. _ PROGCRIS Commers. Procris pseudostrigosa Elmer Leafl. Philip. Bot. 1. (1908) 284, ive Kuching. Very typical, a nearly perfect match for many Philippine collections. The species appears to find its closest alliance in P. frutescens (Bl.) Wedd. | Philippines, Celebes. ees: BS Procris (7?) sp. bree: ane Bag aes : Mount Kinabalu, at 3,500 feet elevation, Haviland (41m. Only staminate flowers are present, but the habit, the flowers and inflorescence, so far as they can, indicate the specimen to be of this genus, while it seems quite distinct from any published species. 0 d -ELATOSTEMA Forst. i Elatostema bulbothrix Stapf I. e. 230, pl. XIX, fig, Apt i Mme, Mount Kinabalu, at 10,000 feet elevation, Haviland 1392, A ae aspporgia = discussing the affinities of this species, Stapf suggests that in spite of its well- ‘Tarked differences from anything previously deseribed it may eome nearest B. glaucescens Wedd. He « 296 ROBINSON. only to the pistillate. Only one receptacle is present on the Sarawak Museum material, but it is staminate, borne upon a peduncle 3 mm long, pubescent like the stem, slender in contrast to the general thickened nature of the stems and leaves. The bracts are corniculate, the flowers tetramerous. All this is in line with Stapf’s suggestion, except that other Philippine species come closer to E. bulbothria than does HE. glaucescens, although the texture of the leaves would keep it distinct from any of them even if there were no other characters. Probably its nearest allies are L. heterophyllum C. B. Rob., whose leaves have quite a different outline and margin, and F. obovatum Wedd. which has much larger and differently shaped leaves. S Elatostema lineare Stapf 1. c. 228. Mount Kinabalu, Kinitaki River, at 5,000 feet elevation, Haviland 1271, type collection. This at once suggests E. pinnatinervium Elmer, by reason of the pinnate leaf-venation, but the leaf-outline is very different, and the staminate receptacles of H. pinnatinervium are peduncled while those of E. lineare are sessile. The leaf resemblance is much closer with an undetermined specimen from Polillo, Bur. Sci. 9195, but the leaf-teeth of the latter are more deeply cut, and the stipules of the Bornean plant are longer than those of either the Polillo plant or of E, pinnatinervium. f Elatostema lithoneurum Stapf |. ¢. 230, PI. XIX, fig. O, 9-16. Mount Kinabalu, at 11,000 feet elevation, Haviland 1206, type collection. The specimen has much external resemblance to -H. palawanense Cc. B. Rob. The leaves are similar in outline and margin, but wider on the Philippine plant, whose narrowest are of about the width of the widest of the Bornean, they are also more definitely oblanceolate or obovate than the latter. Further, the upper surface of the leaves of E. palawanense is scabrous, while the pubescence of E. lithonewrum is much more scattered, the hairs somewhat longer, the surface not at all scabrous. The under surface of the Palawan leaves is also much more densely pubescent, with this pubescence glaucescent, much paler than on the Bornean plant. The lateral veins of the latter leave the costa at a smaller angle. Finally, the staminate receptacles of H. lithoneurum have rather long and slender peduncles, but some young ones in the upper axils are sessile, and this was the state in which the Palawan plant was found. : Several of these differences bring E. lithoneurwm close to BE. lagunense Merr., the nearest Philippine alliance of Z. palawanense, but that is a much coarser plant, with the staminate: receptacles sessile or on short stout peduncles, the leaf-teeth are coarser, and the terminal acumen much more prolonged. : The series of FE. lithoneurum, EB. patlawanense, BE. lagunense, links through the last with E. paludosum Migq., as represented by Hallier 396, Tjibodas, Java, this species in its turn having been reduced by Weddell ® to the status of a variety of E. macrophyllum Brongn. The case between BH. lagunense and EB. paludosum is very critical indeed, but the former has much more continuous leaf-nerves, ‘the leaves themselves are larger, and the stipules somewhat longer. lt is diffi- x cult to decide positively upon a single collection, and our specimen of the Javan plant is sterile, but the two species may prove to be incapable of separation. Between #. paludosum and EF. macrophyllum, the differences are Re quite sufficient for them to be held apart specifically, if the former is adequately, Hees represented by the specimen above cited, and the latter by Hallier 374, Buitenzorg, Java. E. macrophyllum is described as penninerved, which agrees well with the : specimen, but. the same can not be said of Hallier 396, as the basal nerves are * DC. Prodr. 16% (1869) 174. URTICACEAE FROM SARAWAK MUSEUM. 297 distinctly the longest, especially on the narrower side of the leaves. Hallier’s specimen of HE, paludosum is much more pubescent than his of EB. macrophyllum, but from Miquel’s description the leaves of the former are more pubescent than those of the type of the species.. The leaves of LH. lagunense also vary in pubescence, but in that species the explanation in at least some cases is humidity and not age. The stipules of FE. macrophyllum are 3 mm long, those of E£. paludosum only 1 mm long. The staminate receptables of H. lagunense are usually much larger than those of £. paludosum are said to be by Miquel, but they must vary in this respect with age, and this difference would have to be verified by very full collections before it could be used as a_ positively discriminating character. Perhaps the closest leaf-similarity of all between H. lithoneurum and any Philippine species, is with one from Mount Tonglon, Benguet, Phil. Pl. 812 Merrill, which will be described as new,’ but the Benguet plants have not only densely pubescent stems but the staminate receptacles are either shortly and stoutly peduncled or subsessile. Elatostema thalictroides Stapf |. c. 229, pl. YIN, fig. B, 9-8. Mount Kinabalu, at 5,000 feet elevation, Haviland 1219. As already surmised,* this is a very real alliance for E. halconense C. B. Rob., but the latter is a coarser plant with stems and branches of a yellowish or grayish color, while those of E. thalictroides are rather dark-reddish. Except for the ultimate branchlets, which are very densely pubescent in both species, E. halconense is distinctly the more pubescent. The leaves are of different outline, longer and— narrower in E. halecouense, with the apical tooth much farther prolonged. JL. sublignosum C, B. Rob. and HE. baruringense Elmer are progressively more dis- tinct from E. thalictroides than is E. halconense. EB. podophyllum Wedd., although having leaves with a distinctive base and outline, is also in the same alliance. Elatostema sp. Niah, Haviland & Hose 3317, with pistillate receptacles which although very young are sufficient for positive generic determination. The alliance is probably with E. procridioides Wedd., but no staminate receptacles are present, making a positive statement impossible. Elatostema sp. mee Mount Braang, on limestone, Haviland 637, also without staminate receptacles. It has much the appearance of being a reduced state of H. luzonense C. B. Rob., but with this difference, that when the leaves of that species become reduced they take on a different form either from those of better developed plants of the same species or of those of the Bornean collection. There are no opposing leaves of smaller size than the others, the characteristic of F. surculosum Wight, and the leaves are smaller than those of E. sikkimense ©. B. Clarke, resembling rather those of H. glaucescens Wedd., a species which differs in pubescence and in various other ways. : ot : POUZOLZIA Gaudich. Pouzolzia zeylanica (Linn.) Benn. Pl. Jay. Rar. (1838) 67. Niah, Haviland & Hose 3319; Rejang. Tropical Asia and Malaya. 2A “pl, Jungh. (1851) 19. oe 7 See below, page 306. es “This Journal § (1910) Bot. 542. 298 ROBINSON. PIPTURUS Wedd. Pipturus arborescens (Link) C. B. Rob. in Philip. Journ. Sei. 6 (1911) Bot. 13. Paku, Saribas, Haviland & Hose 3320. Not a very typical form, resembling most among Philippine collections those from Palawan and some of those from Bataan. Philippines. Pipturus argenteus (Forst.) Wedd. in DC. Prodr. 16% (1869) 235”. Niah, No. 3321, collector not named. This like the Philippine material so identified does not agree with the description of the species in that the spikes are shorter than the petioles, but this can hardly be considered a serious objection. Sumatra to Australia and Polynesia. Pipturus repandus (Blume) Wedd. in Arch. Mus. Paris 9 (1857) 448. Foot of Matang, Haviland 362. A broad-leaved form, but no more so than several of the Philippine collections so identified. Java, Philippines. OREOCNIDE Miq. Oreocnide trinervis (Wedd.) Miq. Fl. Ind.-Bat. 1* (1859) 270. Near Penkuler Ampat, Haviland 765. Philippines, Formosa. LEUCOSYKE Zoll. & Mor. Leucosyke capitellata (Poir.) Wedd. in DC. Prodr, 16* (1869) 235 Fy Penkuler Ampat, Haviland 350. Like many of the Philippine collections, espe- cially of those from the southern Islands: very likely var. villosa (BI.) Wedd. Java to the Moluccas and Formosa, , ASTROTHALAMUS ©. B. Rob. Astrothalamus reticulatus (Wedd.) C. B. Rob. in Philip. Journ. Sei. 6 (1911) Bot. 19. Foot of Matang, Haviland 351; Buseau, on limestone, Haviland 3852. Mariannes, Philippines. x THE PHILIPPINE JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, C. Botany. Vol. VI, No. 4, September, 1911. PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE, II. By ©. B. Rosrnson, (From the Botanical Section of the Biological Laboratory, Bureau of Science, Manila, P. I.) Somewhat intensive botanical explorations have recently been made in Benguet, and among the collections are representatives of several species not previously obtained. This has also furnished an opportunity to make detailed investigations upon various points, where abundance of herbarium material furnishes controls, so that the results obtained can be checked by many workers. Somewhat unexpectedly, although it should not have been, one collection has rendered necessary a complete revision of the statements which have been made in many works regarding the genus Pipturus. Less numerous collections have been received from other parts of the Islands. Nothing is herein cited unless some light has been thrown upon the species concerned. The numbers placed with the species indicate their sequence in comparison with those enumerated in my previous paper. 9, ELATOSTEMA Forst. p. p- yy ‘In this genus the need for characters that can be depended on as constant is very great. For this reason, a test has been made of the reliability of tetramerous as contrasted with pentamerous staminate flowers. Practically no attention has been paid to this in the past, most workers recording the facts as a matter of routine in describing species, but no one basing conclusions upon them. This is used in Pouzolzta and Gonostegia (Memorialis) as one of the main bases of separation,’ but so far as Philippine experience goes, it is less constant in these genera’ than in Elatostema. Much of the material examined was hardened in alcohol Hook. £. Fl. Br. Ind. § (1888) 580. his Journal 6 (1911) Bot. 8, 10. 300 © : ROBINSON: . while fresh, the remainder was taken from dried plants. The results are * as follows: 1 Collection number. Species. ly merous. e-mierous:|6:mensiadl | } a -| Riad | Se eee | E, flicaule....-..-.----- Sea: 45 | 1 E. podophyllum __.--- | dicoats | 67 | 2 MONTEL 1000 ote ett E. benguetense__.-------- 1 (?) OO so see Bur. Sci. 14004 E. lutescens 100 | Merrill 7643 --- E. lutescens. | : Merrill 1645 222+ = -s---- E. scapigerum -- Merrill 764) ets ke E. glomeratum - | Merrill 7647 --- .| BE. merrillii _- | errul 7660 22s ee ce E. variabile | f Merrill 78h4 222255... 2--- E. purpureum var. _------ ees | Bur. Sei. 13475 --- E. discolor._--.--- | Jeni | Phil. Pl. 812 ..--- EB: purpurewm —...-3+<--- Filed ae a | Merrill 7684, ------.----=-- EZ, piumbeum <_.-..---- | Ee nee | Bur. Sei. 14134 OM a: Be | S | E | E. Bur. Sei. 9907 ._..-.--..--| E. lagunense..-.-. ------- fecha 2h | Bur. Sei. 9766 ....---. -...| E. seriptum _.------------ Sintec | 20 iste =depcet . | Merrill 7516 E. banah 40 | | ur, Set. 3009... 250 eae es 2b SS =----- | For. Bur, 3266 E. angustatum 2 { | i So far as this is a sufficient test, the character seems reliable. It may -be added that where different collection numbers have been referred to the same species, their flowers agree in this respect in almost every case investigated. The only exception known to me is with 2. podophyllum Wedd., normally tetramerous. Two collections so identified, Merrill 6171 and Bur. Sci. 9356, have been noted on the sheets as pentamerous.— Further examination of the former showed that of two flowers dissected one was tetramerous and one pentamerous ; the latter was preponderatingly pentamerous, four receptacles giving 22 pentamerous flowers and only 3 tetramerous. There are four other Philippine species about which discordant statements have been made. HZ. simulans was described * as tetramerous or pentamerous, dissection of six additional flowers showed that they at least were all pentamerous. Mr. Elmer’s examination of the flowers of EB. philippinense disclosed both numbers, mine showed five — only.* Similarly in 2. spinulosum, he found trimerous as well as tetra- merous flowers, | found the latter number only.° panes _ Finally, Weddell calls 2. longifolium doubtfully tetramerous.® Eleven flowers were examined from one receptacle of the broad-leaved plant of Cuming 456, ten were pentamerous, the eleventh was in poor condition but — * This Journal 5 (1911) Bot. 519. : : ae + Leafl. Philip. Bot. 3 (1910) 888; This Journal 5 (1911) Bot. 524. — - * Leafl. Philip. Bot. 2 (1908) 468; This Journal 5 (1911) Bot. 530. “DC. Prodr, 16 (1869) 184. See below, page 303. PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE, II. 301 probably tetramerous; 20 flowers from one receptacle of Bur, Sci. 8186, a good but not perfect match for Cuming’s plant, were all pentamerous. Adding E. pinnatinervium and E. variabile, both tetramerous, and other species herein and previously described, there are now known in the Philippines 31 species with tetramerous flowers, 9 with pentamerous flowers, while those of 8 species are still unknown. Decision upon the relative importance of the character will depend largely upon the opinions held of the nature of the 31 and the 9 respectively, so far at least as our species are concerned, and it must be confessed that the weight of previous opinion regarding these or those most similar to them, would not set much value upon it. Yet it does separate 9 species, five of them having much similarity to one another, while the other four, F. simulans, E. longifolium, EB. obtusiusculum, and E. contiguum have a different ap- pearance from the other four but again much resemblance to one another. Much work must be done upon species of other countries before a final opinion can be passed. l6a. Elatostema discolor sp. nov. Caulibus basi repentibus, appresse-pubescentibus : receptaculis stami- niferis sessilibus, bracteis ovatis, vix cornjculatis ; floribus pentameris : foliis discoloribus, parvis, oblique obovatis vel late oblanceolatis, lateris latioris basi auriculatis, supra medium grosse dentatis, subtrinerviis. Staminate receptacles sessile; outer pair of bracts of the larger recep- tacles ovate, about 2.5 mm long, only very obscurely corniculate, ciliate on the apical half of the margins and especially at the apex, often also with yellowish-brown pubescence on the dorsal surface or with cystoliths, inner pairs of bracts similar, about 2 mm long; bracteoles oblanceolate, about 2 mm long, densely ciliate toward the apex; pedicels of mature . flowers about 2 mm long; perianth-segments 5, oblong, oblong-oblan- ceolate, or broadly lanceolate, about 2 mm long, ciliate on the apical half of the margins and especially at the apex; filaments about 2 mm long; anthers white, the cells widely separated at the base, less than 1 mm long. Stems 15 to 35 cm long, creeping and rooting near the base, and there often branching, the leaf-bearing parts erect or suberect, rarely branched, the stems densely covered with appressed, apically directed, strigose, yellowish pubescence: leaves subsessile, the lamina obovate or broadly oblanceolate, the lowest often reduced in size, the others 15 to 27 mm long, 7 to 12 mm wide, strongly inequilateral especially at the base, the narrower side obtuse, the broader side produced into a short auricle, both margins usually with 3 teeth of comparatively large size, or the wider side with 4 or the narrower with 2, the apical tooth 4 mm long, or less, lan- - ceolate to ovate, not projecting beyond the general outline ; upper surface plumbeous, under surface yellowish-green, the upper with a few, scattered, oo long hairs or glabrous, and with densely crowded cystoliths, the margins : _ with similar hairs or glabrous, the veins of the under surface appressed- 302 ROBINSON. strigose; almost or quite trinerved, the nerves extending to the base of the lamina, auricle excluded, but on the wider side of the wider leaves little longer than the succeeding, other veins usually 3 on each side, some- times 2 or 4, minor yenation hardly conspicuous; stipules narrowly lanceolate to ovate, 1 to 1.8 mm long, with crowded cystoliths and sometimes ciliate. Luzon, Subprovince of Benguet, Baguio, in ravines at about 1,400 m elevation, Bur, Sci. 13475 Ramos. Superficially, the species has more the appearance of B. podophyllum Wedd. than of any other hitherto found in the Philippines, but differs widely from it in the slender stem, wider, larger and more deeply cut leaves, stronger and somewhat different venation, and the absence of the typical leaf-base. It is really in the alliance of the species from H. acrophilum to BE. hastatum, and on a summary of characters probably closest to HE. philip- . pinense Elmer, from which it differs by its more densely pubescent stem, and the shape, color, comparatively deeper and much coarser dentation, and venation of the leaves. It has also much resemblance to EH. hookerianum Wedd., but that has the stems, staminate bracts, and bracteoles glabrous, these bracts are more corniculate, the leaves are usually more acuminate, with different venation, and longer stipules. Probably the closest alliance of all is with ZH. obliquifolinm Reinecke, of Samoa, the name indicating one difference. The Philippine plants are larger with larger leaves, the Samoan have peduncled staminate receptacles. 5. Elatostema filicaule C. B. Rob. in Philip. Journ, Sci. 5 (1911) Bot. 516. Additional collections, Merrill 7627, from mossy forest on Mount Tonglon, Benguet, and Phil. Pl. 802 Merrill, from mossy forest at Pauai, Benguet, both growing at about 2,200 m elevation, and reéxamination of the type material, show that in the smaller-sized receptacles only one of each of the two inner pairs of staminate bracts may be developed. The larger-sized receptacles are of the type common to the genus. The species is, in all probability, a very primitive form. Pistillate flowers have not yet been collected. ‘3la. Elatostema glomeratum sp. nov. Erectum, succulentum: receptaculis staminiferis glomeratis, bracteis haud vel vix corniculatis; floribus tetrameris: foliis siccis subchartaceis, elliptico-oblanceolatis vel elliptico-obovatis, basi utrinque acutis vel latere’ latiore obtusis, margine basin versus excepto dentatis, apice breviter acuminatis, triplinerviis. Staminate receptacles sessile in clusters of 6 to 20 or more, but e retaining the structure typical of the genus; outer pair of bracts orbicular or broadly obovate, rounded at the apex, very shortly or not corniculate, 2 to 2.5 mm long, ciliate or ciliate-serrate on the margins and shortly pilose on the dorsal surfaces; inner pairs broadly oblanceolate, 2 mm long, shortly corniculate, pubescent like the outer ; bracteoles narrowly Ae oblanceolate, 2 mm long, densely pilose on the costa and at CO APRR so pedicels about 0.5 mm long; perianth-segments 4, lanceolate or oblong: “lanceolate, the outer pair slightly longer than 1 mm and densely ciliate” on the apical halves of the margins and at the apex, the inner pair slightly “shorter than 1 mm and less densely ciliate than the outer, all shortly corniculate; filaments 1 mm long; anthers white, about 0.5 mm lo! ach PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE, II. 303 the cells often unequal, approximate at the base: pistillate receptacles unknown. Stems erect, 25 to 45 em high, more often simple, or sparingly branched especially at the base, grooved, densely antrorsely grayish-strigose: leaves with petioles 5 to 8 mm long, similarly pubescent, lamina when dry subchartaceous or chartaceous, elliptic-oblanceolate or elliptic-obovate, 5.5 to 10.5 cm long, 2 to 4 (usually 2.5 to 3) em wide, acute at the base on both sides or on the wider side obtuse, the margins dentate on both sides but not deeply, the teeth of the wider side from about 22 to 30, of the narrower 20 to 24, the apex except on reduced leaves definitely contracted into an acumen 5 to 15 mm, more often about 10 mm long; upper surface glabrous with numerous but inconspicuous cystoliths, under surface ap- pressed-strigose on the veins; triplinerved, the nerves extending four-fifths the length of the lamina or often to the base of the acumen, other veins projecting on the under surface, on each side of the costa more often 3 or 4 but with others of about equal number nearly as promifent, reticula- tions lax, conspicuous; stipules lanceolate to ovate, 2 to 2.5 mm long, acute, pubescent. Luzon, Subprovince of Benguet, Baguio, on wet ledges in ravine, Merrill 7642 (type) ; Mount Tonglon, mossy forest at about 1,900 m elevation, Phil. Pl. 810 Merrill, ravines on banks of small stream at about 1,800 m elevation, Merrill 7641. Among Philippine species, this has its closest alliance with that here identified? as H. longifolium Wedd., differing from it by the clustered staminate inflorescence, pubescence, leaf-bases and serration. It may also be near EL. sessile var. punctatum Wedd., but the receptacles in the present case while numerous and often very small are’ each complete, whereas in the Indian plant, Weddell states that the fasciculate appearance of the (pistillate) receptacles is illusory, the receptacles being in reality deeply lobed.’ In ‘E. glomeratum, the elements ‘of the receptacle are unusually loosely attached to one another. 31. Elatostema longifolium Wedd. in Ann. Sci. Nat. IV 1 (1854) 189; DC. Prodr. 161? (1869) 184; C. B. Rob. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 5 (1911) Bot. 534. , Cuming 456. i ‘ einen ae previously been called to the Cuming specimen in this herbarium, and all identifications here have been based on the broad-leaved plant on our sheet, The difficulties are these. The name is inappropriate ; the leaves are not elongate-lanceolate ; those on our sheet are 27 to 37 mm wide ; the om of the leaves can not be called acute; the stipules are not long-persistent; the ! stead of doubtfully tetramerous, there staminate flowers are pentamerous im being little mechanical shea in ascertaining the fact. Most of Ae I io see why Weddell would not have made it a variety of B. sessile, when e : treated H. ulmifolium Miq., which is a very near ally of the a ee x to say nothing of HE. brongniartianum Wedd., which is much further | we . sessile than is E. ulmifolium. This has led to the suspicion that this Pe - leaved plant is really E. tomentosum Wedd., afterwards placed by him ee . --B, ulmifotium, both as varieties of B. sessile. This is still conjecture, for a ic! the botanists of Kew and Paris have most courteously searched their herbaria * See This bret 5 (1911) Bot. 534; also below. if * DC. Prodr, 16% (1869) 173. : 304 ROBINSON. and even attempted to get light from those of other institutions, LH. tomentosum has not been found. Weddell compares L. longifolium with FE. lineolatum Wight, and the narrow- leaved plant of Cuming’s collection does approach closely in habit to some collections of that species. Until now, there has been nothing here to match this narrow-leaved plant with any reasonable probability of identity. The want seems to be supplied by Bur. Sci. 13108 Foxworthy & Ramos, from Guinayangan, Tayabas, which has just about the appearance that an apparently immature plant such as that of Cuming might be expected to assume. Differences can easily be found; the stems are less pubescent, the longest leaf is 18 em long but is little over 2 cm in width, the widest slightly exceeding 2.5 em, and these longer leaves have more numerous teeth and veins, yet the leaves which have the same size as those of Cuming’s collection are practically identical with them in these and all other characters. The alliance suggested by habit is no longer with EF. lineolatum Wight, but through intermediates in B. bana- haense and E. carinoi with E. sessile. Yet even between the three Philippine species, the stipules alone are sufficient for discrimination. These stipules are much in evidence on Bur. Sci. 13108; its staminate flowers are tetramerous. 28a. Elatostema lutescens sp. nov. Herba succulenta, E. viridescenti Elmer similis, sed differt foliis multo minoribus, latere angustiore magis dentatis, stipulis brevioribus, recep- taculorum staminiferorum bracteis minus corniculatis: receptaculis ses- silibus vel brevissime pedunculatis ; floribus staminiferis tetrameris. Staminate receptacles very shortly peduncled or sessile, completely inclosed beneath by the outer pair of bracts, the latter glabrous, in well- matured receptacles 3.5 mm long, 5 to 6 mm wide, broadly rounded at the apex, the spur thickened at its apex but barely projecting beyond the general outline of the bract; inner two pairs of bracts 2.6 mm long, 3.5 mm wide, their margins broadly hyaline, the costa thick but not becoming free nor reaching the apex of the bract, glabrous; bracteoles cuneate-oblanceolate, about 2.5 mm long: flowers on pedicels about 2.5 mm long; perianth-segments 4, shortly and irregularly or not corniculate, 1.5 mm long, the outer pair oblong-oyate, glabrous, the inner pair nar- rower, Ciliolate at the apex; filaments about 1.5 mm long, anthers about 1 mm long, the cells widely separated at the base: pistillate receptacles sessile ; outer pair of bracts ovate, 3 mm long, shortly corniculate, glabrous, free for rather more than half their length; next two pairs lanceolate, 2 mm long, corniculate, ciliate ; bracteoles narrowly oblanceolate, cuneate, 1 to 1.5 mm long, long-ciliate toward apex; pedicels short; perianth- _ lobes rounded, about 0.2 mm long ; achene brown, becoming rather strongly ridged, about 0.6 mm long. Succulent or very succulent, 35 to 60 em high, usually much branched, es vegetative parts glabrous, definitely yellowish-green when fresh but losing this somewhat on drying: leaves very shortly petioled or subsess le, the 2 lamina when dry submembranaceous, usually more or less falcate, lanee- olate or narrowly elliptic, 3 to 7.5 em long, 7 to 17 mm_ wide, sp often still smaller, inequilateral, the base of the narrower side acute oT PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE, II. 305 subobtuse, of the wider side obtuse or slightly auriculate, the margin of the wider side with usually 7 or 8 teeth, of the narrower usually with one or two less, the apex protracted but hardly exceeding the general outline ; triplinerved, other veins usually 4 or 5 on each side, but they and especially the minor reticulations usually little conspicuous ; glabrous, but the upper surface with numerous cystoliths; stipules subulate, 2 to 3 mm long. Luzon, Subprovince of Benguet, Baguio and vicinity, in ravines, Merrill 7643 (type), Bur. Sci. 11975, 14004 Robinson; Mount Tonglon, on banks along trail at 1,600 to 1,800 m, Phil. Pl. 811 Merrill; Sablan, Bur. Sci. 12752 Fénix. The last specimen was formerly referred by me® to E. viridescens Elmer, to which B. lutescens has great general similarity both in field and herbarium, but on comparison of a very large quantity of material, it differs very constantly in all the characters above noted. Its real alliance is with EB. angustatum C. B. Rob., which is a more delicate and usually much less branched plant, with thinner (when dry) leaves, the margins with more numerous teeth, and the apex more prolonged. ; l7a. Elatostema merrillii sp. nov. Admodum parvum, basi reptans, altius ascendens: receptaculis ses- silibus, staminiferorum bracteis breviter sed inaequaliter corniculatis ; floribus pentameris: foliis parvis, oblique oblanceolatis vel obovatis, tri- plinerviis vel saepius admodum quadruplinerviis. Staminate receptacles sessile, few-flowered; outer pair of bracts oval, 2.5 mm long, one of them with a spur extending about 1 mm beyond the general outline, spur of the other shorter and much less conspicuous, — both long-ciliate on the margins and back; next two pairs of bracts cune- ate-oval, 2 mm long, ciliate; bracteoles oblanceolate, 2 mm long ; pedicels short ; perianth-segments 5, oval or oblong, 1.5 mm long, slightly cormie- ulate, sometimes ciliate at the apex; filaments about 1.5 min long ; anthers 0.6 mm long, the cells widely separated at the base: pistillate receptacles sessile; outer and inner bracts more or less similar, ovate to lanceolate, shortly corniculate, 2 mm long, ciliate on the margins, more or less villose on ‘the back ; bracteoles narrowly oblanceolate, nearly 2 mm long, ciliate; pedicels very short ; perianth-lobes 3, rounded, less than 0.1 mm long; achenes light-brown, about 0.5 mm long. a - Plants creeping at the base, thereafter ascending, the stems 10 to * em long, densely covered at the apex with rather soft whitish or agate somewhat spreading soft pubescence, less densely so below: leaves eee the membranaceous lamina obliquely oblanceolate or obovate, 14 to 26 mm long, 6 to 12 mm wide, or some especially toward the base of the plant smaller, the narrower side acute at the base, the wider rounded = slightly auricled, the margin of the wider side not deeply cut into 10 to “ teeth, the narrower side with about half the number and entire towa the base, the teeth more often ciliate at the apex, apical tooth merely sphis Journal 6 (1911) Bot. 31. 306 ROBINSON. continuing the general outline; upper surface with not very conspicuous cystoliths and usually with scattered but conspicuous fairly long white hairs, under surface with shorter and often yellowish pubescence on the veins and to a less extent between them; triplinerved or with a short additional nerve arising from the costa below the main nerve of the wider side; other veins usually 3 on each side of the costa; stipules hyaline, lanceolate, 2.5 to 3 mm long, ciholate on the margins and at or near the apex often ciliate. Luzon, Subprovince of Benguet, Mount Tonglon, in very shaded places along trail at about 1,800 m elevation, Merrill 7647. The closest Philippine ally of this species is probably EH. acrophilum ©. B. Rob., of which the staminate re- ceptacles are still unknown, HZ. merrillii differing from it by the more pubescent stems, more numerous and shallower leaf-teeth, and venation. 33a. Elatostema purpureum sp. nov. Basi reptans, aliter ascendens, caulibus purpureis, scabris: recepta- culis staminiferis sessilibus vel breviter pedunculatis, bracteis vix corni- culatis; floribus tetrameris: receptaculis pistilliferis sessilibus: foliis subsessilibus, oblique obovatis vel oblanceolatis, basi latere angustiore acutis, latere latiore breviter auriculatis, marginibus dentatis, apice saepius breviter acuminatis, triplinerviis. Staminate receptacles sessile or on peduncles up to about 3 mm long; outer pair of bracts 4.5 to 5 mm long, 6.5 to 7 mm wide, rounded and very shortly and inconspicuously corniculate at the apex, densely villose on the back; inner two pairs of bracts 3.5 to 4 mm long, somewhat inequilateral, subquadrate or suborbicular, the margins more or less hyaline, elsewhere villose, ciliate at the apex, hardly corniculate ; bracteoles _ oblong-oblanceolate, 4 mm long, villose on the costa, ciliate at the apex; — pedicels up to 3.5 mm long; perianth-segments 4, oblong-lanceolate or lanceolate, 1.5 to 2.5 mm long, ciliate or glabrous, one pair corniculate; — filaments about 2 mm long; anthers white, about 1 mm long: pistillate — receptacles sessile ; outer pair of bracts broadly ovate, 3.5 mm long, villose;_ inner pairs "hit ceolnts. nearly 3 mm long, ciliate at the apex; pedicels short ; perianth-lobes probably 3, about 0.1 mm long; ovary white, 0.5 mm_ long. Plants creeping at the base, thereafter curving-ascending, the purple stems 20 to 35 cm long, rarely branched, strigose: leaves almost sessile 7 the rigidly. chartaceous or coriaceous lamina oblanceolate to obovate, Be : to 5 em long, 1 to 1.8 cm wide, the base of the narrower side acute, 0 th wider side shortly auriculate, the margins on the wider side wi ot to 14 teeth, on the narrower with 5 to 11, the apical tooth more 0 t extending from 4 to 6 mm beyond the general outline; both surfaces _ Strigose-scabrous, the upper with numerous cystoliths ; triplinerved, __ nerve of the wider side more often. uniting with the lower of the sucee 8 to ix veins by minor anastomoses pales! veins of the narrower aid PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE, II. 307 stipules narrowly oblong, 4 to 6 mm long, acuminate, with cystoliths on the costa, ciliate or glabrous. Luzon, Subprovince of Benguet, Mount Tonglon, in mossy forest at about 1,900 m elevation, Phil. Pl. 812 Merrill. With this belongs Merrill 7644, from a more shaded place at a slightly lower elevation on the same mountain. The leaves average slightly larger, and are conspicuously thinner, with fewer marginal teeth. Otherwise the two collections agree down to the details of the flowers, and the stipules and venation are the same. H. purpureum has as much the general appearance of H. lagunense Merr. as of any other Philippine ‘species, but the staminate bracts are less corniculate, the leaves smaller, and the stipules shorter. Probably the closest alliance is with H. lithoneurum Stapf.” 43. Elatostema scapigerum C. B, Rob. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 5 (1911) Bot. 542. While additional collections have in general confirmed the statements previ- ously made regarding the position of the staminate receptacles of this species, a single small plant of Vanoverbergh 1236 has the peduncle arising from one of the upper leaf-axils, and on another plant the peduncle is about half-way up the stem. In rare cases, therefore, the species might fail to be recognized by the characters assigned to it in the key, but it is still very different from any other of our species. On the whole, it may best be compared with £. longipedunculatum Elmer, but the structure of the staminate receptacles is very different, resembling more that found in the ordinary pistillate receptacles : of the genus, By dissecting a young receptacle, also from Vanoverbergh 1236, which had attained a diameter of about 8 mm, or about half that of the average mature receptacle, it was easy to trace the 6 bracts typical of the staminate receptacles of the genus, but ‘the two pairs which ordinarily are at least partially covered by the outer pair were at this stage already lateral to the latter. It is probable that still younger stages might show an even more typical structure. These two outer bracts were ovate, 2.5 to 3 mm long, the apex ‘rather acuminate-mucronate than corniculate, for the apical projection is formed by the costa, which bears no spur. The other two pairs of bracts are about 2.5 mm long, also ovate, less acuminate. Still another receptacle of the same eollection has a peduncle over 13 em long. All suspicion that the form might prove to be a monstrosity has been removed, and its range has been: extended to Benguet, at Baguio, Merrill 7882, and on Mount Tonglon, Merrill 7637, 7649. 2. Elatostema variabile C. B. Rob. in Philip. Journ. Sei. 5 (1911). Bot. 514; fe 6 (INI Bot pe ee : 20. Elatostema banahaense C. BO Rob. 1c. 6 (1911) Bot. 526. 28, Elatostema carinoi W. R. Shaw ex C. B. Rob. I. ¢. 5 ( 1911) Bot. 532. All of these have been supplemented by additional collections, some of which ‘are as typical as could possibly be desired, while get alge Lari difficult problems. As regards 2. banahaense, there are two additional collections from Mount Banajao, Merrill 7516 and one from the herbarium of the puesta College of Agriculture, obtained by 8. Asuneton, the shad Kee ease an the latter probably gathered within a very short distance from the = bli locality. Both have more mature staminate receptacles than papier ven th at: and while the bracts ate corniculate, this character is so slightly ae _ that it is inconspicuous in the mature rec »ptacles, so i oe Gath aha placed near #. carinoi tha viridescens and its allies. ‘apes “s 1 See above, page, 207. sae ' 308 ROBINSON. leaves have great similarity to those of H. carinoi, except that in HB. banahaense the base of the narrower side of the lamina ends some distance from the petiole, while on the other side it is usually at least subauriculate. But there are intermediates to such an extent that if there were no other character, the species could not be held separate. That character seems to be supplied by the stipules, which are longer and usually wider in H. banahaense, their length reaching 25 mm on Merrill 7516, and ranging from 14 to 22 mm on the College of Agriculture collection, while they are from 10 mm (young) to 16 mm on the type. The Zamboanga collections cited in the description of H. banahaense also show this character, as do two numbers from Mount Pulog, Benguet, For. Bur. 16047, 16051 Curran, Merritt, & Zsckokke, originally identified as E. carinoi and responsible for part of the variation recorded for that species with regard to this very character, although by some oversight they were not cited. All of these should be referred to E. banahaense. The stipules of re carinoi and H. variabile are usually narrower, and yary in length from 3.5 to 11 mm, slightly longer on the HE. variabile type than on the other, but are usually from 4.5 to 7 mm, in contrast to a normal 15 to over 20 mm on E. banahaense. Taken in conjunction with the other characters, insufficient as the latter alone would be, BE. banahaense and KE. carinoi are better held distinct. This amended view of the affinities of EF. banahaense also brings it very close to EE. edule, which has wider leaves, less acuminate, a still more pronounced basal auricle, and stronger venation. It will not be surprising if future collee- tions render H. edule untenable as a separate species. As it is, the Mount Mayon plant cited under H. edule, is rather EH. banahaense. Vanoverbergh 828, the type of EH. variabile, was pistillate, and on its general appearance, no close alliance with EH. carinoi would be suspected, but T now find it very difficult to keep them apart, although their union would throw discredit on the validity as differentiating characters of leaf-outline, peduncled as opposed to sessile staminate receptacles, pinnate as contrasted with the most definite triplinerved venation, and coarse teeth or even lobes as against entire margins, all in the one case. No one could fail to distinguish the two types of leaves; one of the difficulties is that some plants having the upper leaves of the narrow, pinnate-veined type of FE. variabile, have others lower down on the same stems which approach closely to the normal type of L. carinoi. This is to some extent shown on plate 7 of this volume, but is more definite on collections recently obtained. In no case has a plant yet been obtained with leaves which are entirely typical of both species. Vanoverbergh 1226 is certainly B. variabile; the receptacles are borne on slender peduncles usually 10 to 18 mm long, but shorter in the case of very young receptacles; the bracts are barely corniculate as in HE. carinoi, the flowers tetramerous. The staminate receptacles on the type sheet of #. carinoi have usually rather stout peduncles 4 to 6 mm long, hidden on a front view by the receptacles themselves, or the young receptacles may be sessile. For, Bur. 4841 Curran, Merrill 4847, 7638, Bur. Sci. 2828 Mearns, Bur. Sci. 14111, 14128 Robinson, are quite typical E. carinoi in leaf- characters, except that the under surface of the leaves of the first is slightly pubescent; all but one have staminate receptacles quite as in the type of that. species, with short peduncles or none, the exception is pistillate only. Vanover” bergh 510 is also typical E. carinoi, but Vanoverbergh 510a, collected by him at a different locality as the same species, while good 2. carinoi as to leaves except that they are smaller than usual, has the staminate receptacles On — slender peduncles, on one plant 5 to 10 mm long, on the other only 1 w . mm. In spite of the differences in the peduncles the plants ‘could so far ge ’ es PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE, II. 309 separated with ease by leaf-characters. Indeed, by forcing characters which. are ordinarily stable, four species could be deliminated. The nature of the material itself shows that such a proceeding would be most inadvisable. The final difficulty comes with Merrill 7639, 7640, collected some days apart from nearly the same locality on Mount Tonglon. Some of the plants are as to leaves typical HP. variabile, others are equally typical HB. carinoi, some few have the upper leaves of the former type, but the lower ones approaching those of the latter. Both of these have staminate receptacles. On 7639, these are sessile except on one plant, where they are very short, while on 7640 they are shortly peduncled or sessile, with no difference in this or any other respect between those in the axils of the two types of leaves. H. carinoi and E. variabile are therefore very closely allied, having identical receptacles with the same range of variation in their attachment, nor can any sufficient means of separation be found in stipules or pubescence. There remains in doubt the question of leaf-outline, with which the venation is inseparably connected. This is not simply due to difference in habitat. For example, the two forms were found together in the two last collections cited, while my two collections, both per- fectly typical B. carinoi, came from quite different conditions, one growing in muddy soil along the edge of a ditch among grasses not’ tall enough to overshadow it, the other was on rock, exposed to the spray of a small waterfall, within a small cavern where it was sheltered from direct sunlight except in the early morning. The link between the species is in the resemblance between lower leaves of BE. variabile and normal ones of FE. carinoi: it is not yet quite complete. Elatostema carinoi is in cultivation at Camp John Hay, near Baguio, growing luxuriantly on rocks In the spray of a small fountain, the only known instance where a species of the genus has been so utilized in the Philippines. From references to pubescence above and its frequent use in my keys and elsewhere, one without access to the material might suspect that species were being segregated with this as the main character. It is therefore advisable to state that it has been found to be very constant, especially upon the stems, and has been offered as a guide only in the cases where not only this is 80, but other characters are present, less easily or at any rate less briefly described. On the leaves, it is not so constant. It does not hold with H. lagunense, where in the large clump of plants from which the type and other collections were obtained, it varies from one individual to another in general correlation with the emount of spray received from the Los Baiios waterfall, but this is a very exceptional case. 10, BOEHMERIA Jacq. 2a. Boehmeria beyeri sp. nov. Arbuscula ramosa: dioica, glomerulis axillaribus, sessilibus; floribus staminiferis tetrameris; perianthio pistillifero compresso-oblanceolato, apice contracto, 4-dentato, extus substrigoso, ovarlum multo superante: foliis alternis vel rarissime oppositis, valde inaequimagnis sed. alternis is, ovatis, aliis mediocriter haud valde reductis, aliis breviter petiolat _mediocrite petiolatis, ellipticis, = acute acuminatis, margine dentatis, trinervis vel altero minus conspicuo interjecto. — Dioecious; staminate glomerules axillary, eter; bracteoles elliptic, 2.5. mm long, corniculate, 103750——6 saab: 5 to 8 mm in diam- late, slightly pilose at and 310 ROBINSON. near the apex; pedicels about 1 mm long, articulated at the base of the flowers, villose at their apices; perianth-segments 4, oval, subcucullate, 1 mm long, the apical wing projecting about 0.6 mm, canescent-villose except at the base; filaments about 1 mm long; anthers ovate, 0.6 mm long; rudimentary ovary oblong, rounded at the apex, 0.5 mm long, minutely pilose: pistillate glomerules about the same size as the stam- inate; bracts oblong-lanceolate, 2 mm long, pubescent on the apical two- thirds of the costa and ciliate on the margins; perianth compressed- oblanceolate, 2 mm long, contracted at the apex and obscurely 4-toothed, substrigose on the outer surface; ovary ellipsoid, 1 mm long, pubescent toward the apex; stigma continuous, about 1.5 mm long, not far exserted from the perianth, pubescent along one side. Shrubs, the branches and branchlets terete, canescent-pilose: leaves alternate or very rarely opposite, alternately unequal in length of petiole, length and usually shape of lamina, the smaller on petioles 2 to 3.5 mm long, the lamina chartaceous or subcoriaceous, ovate, 3 to 3.5 cm long, 18 to 20 mm wide, very shortly and obtusely acuminate, the larger on petioles 8 to more often about 20 mm long, the lamina elliptic to lanceolate, 8 to 10 cm long, 3 to 4 em wide, the apex con- tracted into a slender acute acumen 1 to 1.5 em long, both series of leaves varying from subacute to truncate at the base, slightly inequilat- eral, the margins dentate except at the extreme base, the teeth shallow, subequal, obliquely ovate, about 35 on each side of the larger leaves, the apices usually blunt, callus-tipped or shortly mucronate; trinerved or with a short and much less conspicuous nerve below the main nerve of one or both sides, the nerves extending about three-fourths the length — of the lamina, other veins 3 or 4 on either side or rarely slightly more, the articulations numerous, immersed on the upper surface, projecting on the lower, both surfaces thereby divided into sections about 1 to 1.5 mm wide; upper surface softly or substrigosely pubescent, the hairs sub- stellately arranged in each section, under surface canescent-villose along all the larger veins; stipules lanceolate, scarious, 7 to 11 mm long, long- acuminate, canescent-villose on and near the costa. Luzon, Subprovince of Ifugao, Bila, Bur. Sci. 13540 H. O. Beyer: Subprovince of Benguet, Mount Tonglon, in mossy forest at 1,900 m elevation, Merrill 7630. The former contains no staminate flowers, the latter no pistillate; the deserip- tion, except for the staminate glomerules, has been taken entirely from the type- In the one case where opposite leaves were found, the petioles are about 2 and 3 cm long, respectively, and the lamina of the larger type. In addition to the leaves described, short branchlets often bear smaller leaves, similar otherwise to : those of the stem, but with corresponding diminution in’ the length of the : petioles. The species is intermediate in appearance between B. blumei Wedd. — and B. villosa C. B. Rob., differing from the former by the absence of reduced . Re leayes on the stems, from the latter by its alternate leaves, more slender petioles, ee more conspi econdary venation, smaller leaf-teeth, and pubescence. PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE, II. 311 16. PIPTURUS Wedd. Pipturus dentatus comb. nov. Pouzolzia dentata C. B. Rob. in Philip. Journ. Sci 6 (1911) Bot. 7. Material of this species, seen by me in a fresh condition, Phil. Pl. 807 Merrill, from near Pauai, Benguet, has led to a complete confirmation of Mr. Elmer’s note, cited by me in the original description of this species, as well of my com- ments thereon. But it has forced the conclusion that the characters depended upon to differentiate Pipturus from Pouzolzia are not merely unreliable as such, but that many statements regarding them, made by myself as well as by others, are actual errors. Several, including the most important, are here quoted. Weddell. Fem.: Perigonium ...........- cum ovario concreto ..........-- Stigma. ............ caducissimum. Fructus ............ siccus.* Weddell. Ovarium perigonio conforme eique adnato .............. Stigma :cinacyi caducissimum .......... Fructus ........-. e pericarpio nucamentaceo perigonio baccante (2?) vestito constitutus ...... .. Fructus s. capitulum fructiferum a peregrinatoribus moriformis dicitur, at specimina exsiccata hunc characterem non retinent.” Miquel. Ovarium perigonio concretum ........---.- stigmate caducissimo ..........-.-- Fructus ............ pericarpio nucamentaceo, perigonio baceato vestitus.”® Bentham and Hooker. Fl. 9: Perianthium -..-... tenuiter carnulosum. Ovarium inclusum, perianthio adhaerens; stigma -......... deciduum. Receptaculum sub fructibus globosum, leviter carnosum Y. siceum. And in the key to the genera: Perianthium fructiferum carnosum, ore minuto achaenio incluso subadnato.* Hooker. Fruiting perianth more or less fleshy ..------- Ovary free; stigma linear, deciduous .......---------+ Achene free within the thinly fleshy perianth -............ (P. velutinus) Fem. perianths succulent, in fruit forming pisiform heads with long exserted recurved styles.” : Bentham. Female perianth —.- .. becoming slightly succulent as yell as the receptacle when in fruit. Ovary enclosed in and adnate to the perianth, ........... style or stigma deciduous after flowering.” Engler. Blh. der Q --...---------- bei der Fruchtieife mehr oder weniger fleischig eslittb oe N. leicht abfallend .............. Frkn. der Blh. abhiingend ................ Blh. der 9 bei der Fruchtreife diinn fleischig.” é Smith. Perianthium 9? -.-.-.--- ovarium includens et ei adnatum, persistens stigma deciduum. Achenium .....------------ perianthio carnosulo vestitum (P. incanus) Achenia in excavationes profundas receptaculi caTROEO- puberuli immerse incrassati succosi irregulariter globosi basi impressi brevissime Ereeeseeanere perianthio arcte inclusa.* Robinson. Stigma deciduous. Fruiting perianth succulent.” The characters which place the genus in the Boehmerieae are not quoted, as upon these there is no room for dispute. There remain several points, (1) is ‘ 4 Ann. Sei. Nat. Bot. IV 1(1854) 196. 2 DC, Prodr. 16% (1869) 235." 13 FB]. Ind, Bat. 1? (1859) 268. “Gen. Pl, 3 (1890) 390. 5 FL. Br. Ind. 5 (1888) 479, 589. 1 RF], Austr. 6 (1873) 155. Die Natiirl. Pflanzenfam. 3* (1894) 110,113. * Koord. & Val. Bijdr. Boomsort. Java 12 (1910) "24, 727. » This Journal 5 (1910) Bot. 474. 812 ROBINSON. the stigma deciduous; (2) is the perianth adnate to the ovary either in flower or in fruit; (3) is the perianth succulent either in flower or in fruit; (4) what is the nature of the receptacle? On all of these points, there is more or less contradiction in the statements cited. It must be prefaced that the following observations are based upon Philippine material only, and may not hold for species other than those here discussed, but this is improbable. The first significant point is in Weddell’s remark upon travellers’ field-notes. In gathering fruiting branchlets of Pipturus arborescens, the mature receptacles are almost certain to fall unless extreme precautions be taken. It. may well happen that even in large herbaria, not a single one of these may be retained. Further, at this stage the achenes are very loosely held in the very fleshy receptacle, in drying they are almost certain to fall apart. Those who have not supplemented their studies by field observation, may have been compelled to draw their conclusions from quite immature fruiting receptacles. Abundant material of P. arborescens was obtained near Manila, from a clump of bushes already represented by Bur. Sci. 9568, and showed all stages. The © receptacles are developed in acropetal succession along the branchlets, and the flowers are often evident in the axils of the very youngest leaves. At this stage a receptacle can hardly be said to exist, the flowers being almost sessile on the branchlet, the stigmas are quite evident. As the development proceeds, the receptacle becomes more and more evident, at first as a flattened nearly cireular plate, with pubescence more conspicuous than itself, but it grows rapidly, be- coming roughly spherical, and at this stage ordinarily loses the stigmas, and soon thereafter becomes white, and its ultimate condition is almost exactly that described by Mr. Smith for P. incanus. The base may be flat or cuneate, with a more or less angular cross-section, the achenes after the receptacle has become very succulent and waxen-white may be so far immersed that their apex is a millimeter from the outer surface of the receptacle or even more, or they may be still exserted; they are by now practically unattached to the receptacle and may fall separately: or the receptacle may fall as a whole. At what stage the term succulent may first be applied to the receptacle, is a matter of choice. At its first appearance, it has the consistence of the herbaceous branchlet to which it ts attached; ordinarily, it is distinctly white soon after the stigmas have fallen. When fully mature, there is no room for discussion as to its succulent nature, at least in P. arborescens and P. dentatus, the two species from which I have seen fresh receptacles. But I take exception to the comparison of their general appearance to those of Morus, suggesting Fragaria as a substitute. In other words, the perianth is never more succulent than are the receptacles at their very earliest stages. At first, it is green, ultimately it is brownish- black or black, the apex changing color before the base. There are few plants whose perianth is not equally succulent, Glumaceae and such cases excepted, and if there is a difference, the pistillate perianth is further from being succulent in fruit than in flower. Yet, as a descriptive term, I would prefer herbaceous to membranaceous. At all stages, the perianth closely surrounds the ovary °F achene, but in no specimen that I have examined in P. dentatus or P. arborescens, can they be called adnate. The surface of ovary and achene alike is smooth and shining, which in itself nearly answers the question. Finally, Hooker’s apparent inconsistency on the subject of th stigma may be mentioned, not only again to call attention to the fact 5 a on a herbarium sheet appear to be mature receptacles may really be earlier oe e deciduous that what : if PHILIPPINE URTICACEAE, II. 313 stages, but also to emphasize the rather close tendency of some forms to bridge the gap between Cypholophus and Boehmeria on one hand and Pipturus and Pouzolzia on the other, with respect to this very character.” Since its segregation by Weddell, no one has proposed to reduce Pipturus to ‘any other genus, and certainly I have no such intention. Nor, so far as I can ascertain, has any recent writer wrongly referred to it any species belonging elsewhere, although this discussion has arisen through my own reference to Pouzolzia of a species which I now believe to be a Pipturus. But upon what character are these genera to be held distinct? Apparently, none can be drawn from the pistillate perianth, and even without going outside of Pouzolzia, there are species where that has been alleged to be adnate to the ovary, even as is the case with Pipturus, while I have failed to find it so in either genus. There remains the fleshy receptacle, so obvious to every observer in the field, so im- perfectly shown in the herbarium, although the early stages even there have evidently been sufficiently indicative. This I believe to be the correct solution. “There has been time to compare notes with Mr. J. J. Smith, who has been ‘able to make a further examination of Pipturus repandus. He finds that its fruiting perianth as well as its flowering one is thick and very succulent and replete with a viscid sap. The fruiting perianth is hardly longer than the flowering one, but the color, at first grass-green, changes into a dirty green. His results have led to yet another examination of P. arborescens, with full confirma- tion of the above statements regarding it. The utmost concession that can be made is that the perianth is kept moist by the very succulent receptacle. The net result of the two series of observations would seem to be that the nature of the perianth is not the same in all species of the genus, but that they agree in the nature of the receptacle. Staminate receptacles are less perfectly developed than the pistillate. * The change in the generic position of Pipturus dentatus unexpectedly reveals the fact that it is with difficulty delimited verbally from P. arborescens, its nearest ally, as both belong in the group with axillary inflorescence, and have free stipules; and P. mindanaensis, the only other species of the genus of which both these statements are true, differs from P. dentatus even more than from P. arborescens. But the two last differ widely in appearance and are undoubtedly distinct specifically. The petioles of P. dentatus are somewhat shorter and stouter, and they like the branchlets are clothed with denser, longer, and less appressed pubescence than those of P. arborescens; the leaf-teeth of P. dentatus are at once very evident and rounded, in P. arborescens they are rarely rounded except when they are very shallow, and their margin on the side toward the apex of the leaf is ordinarily much shorter than toward the base, in re dentatus these margins are more nearly equal. The branchlets of P. dentatus are more 71g7ag than those of P. arborescens, and like the upper surface of the leaves dry to a darker color; a conspicuous feature of nearly every shoot of the former . 24 presence of short axillary branchlets bearing reduced and shorter-petioled — these are much less frequently found on P. arborescens, but do occur. i resemblance is still greater to P. ruber Heller, of Hawaii, Heller 2852, om si stipules of that species are adnate, its petioles are stouter, the lamina larger, less pubescent, usually 5-nerved at the base. ©” See This Journal 6 (1911) Bot. 2. oe 2 See This Journal 6 (1911) Bot. 8, under P. rubricaulis. 314 ROBINSON. 18. DEBREGEASIA Gaudich. Alcoholic material, collected with Phil. Pl. 808 Merrill, from Mount Tonglon, Benguet, appears to show that the pistillate perianth when in the flowering stage may be considered very loosely adnate to the ovary. The latter is separated with ease, but usually has attached fragments of tissue from the inner wall of the perianth, which in their turn are readily removable. Still, as the ovary appears roughened, the term adnate may be applicable. But its use as a generic character is to be avoided wherever possible, as there is much reason to believe that the mechanical difficulty of ascertaining the facts has often led botanists working upon dried material to wrong conclusions; if this is not the case, it becomes certain that the ovary and the perianth may or may not be adnate within the limits of the same genus.” Trimen, in his key to the Urticaceae,* distinguishes Debregeasia from Ville- brunea (Oreocnide), by the character “Fem. fis. naked” as contrasted with “Fem. fls. surrounded by fleshy bracteoles.” This does not hold true for the Philippine species of Debregeasiu, as its flowers are surrounded by bracteoles, although these are short, and can hardly be called fleshy. 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(Kew, England.) Being engaged in the study of the large and perplexing genus. Millettia I requested a loan of the Philippine specimens in the Herbarium of the Bureau of Science in order to supplement the abundant material from those Islands already preserved in the Kew Herbarium. Mr. Merrill’s courteous compliance with my request now enables me to draw up the following key to the Philippine representatives of the group, and to add the descriptions of three additional species, the types of which are pre- served in the Herbarium of the Bureau of Science. KEY TO THE PHILIPPINE MILLETTIAS. 1, Flowers subtended by long linear bracts 1. M. ra 1. Bracts short or none. 2. Leaflets stipellate 2. M. piscatoria 2. Leaflets without stipellae. 3. Flowers paniculate. : cs ? 4. Leaflets 3 to 5 : 3. M. longipes 4, Leaflets 11 to 13 4. M. a 3. Flowers racemose. 4. Fruiting pedicels 1.5 to 2 em Tong... Ean Ae | Y ecniafolis 4. Pedicels in flower and fruit less than 1 em -~ f ’ 5. Leaves less than 10 em long.......--.-----..----- 6. M. foaworthyi 5. Leaves 15 to 30 em long. 6. Standard without auricles. ; 7. Racemes pedunculate .............---.-: _ 7, M. stipulata 7, Racemes floriferous to the base.8. M. Iuzonensis 6. Standard auricle. ae 7. Calyx 4 mm deep. .....-.-------i------- 9. M. cavitensis 7. Calyx 2 mm “see uh Tia ie Se ee M. merrillii 8 Leaflets 6 oo j.wseccee ie ast ~ i. co 105264 316 DUNN. Millettia litoralis Dunn. sp. nov. M. dehiscenti Prain speciei javanicae affinis sed tomento inflorescentiae adpresso distincta. Arbor parva (?) ramis fuscis lenticellatis. Folia 5- vel 6-juga, 14 ad 17 cm longa, glabra, petiolo 5-plo longiora; stipulae ovatae persistentes 2 ad 3 mm longae; foliola superiora lateralia ovato-oblonga, obtuse acuminata, basi rotundata, 4 ad 5 cm longa, papyracea, utrinque paullo reticulata, venis 5- vel 6-paribus ; petioluli 2 ad 3 mm longi; sti- pellae nullae. Racemi axillares et, supra folia, stipulis tantum suffulti paniculam formantes, ad 25 cm longi, pedunculati, rachidibus praecipue apice dense adpresse pubescentibus; nodi floriferi brevissimi. Flores fasciculati, 1 cm longi; pedicelli 8 ad 10 mm longi, tenuiter albo-puberuli ; bracteae minutae; bracteolae caducae. Calyx late patulus, 2 mm longus, 3 mm latus, infra puberulus, obscure dentatus. Petala alba, minute et sparse puberula; vexilli lamina reflexa, ovata, basi conduplicata nec callosa in unguem angustata, ungue bis longior; alae angustae, semisag- ittatae; carinae petala basi truncata. Stamina monadelphia. Discus unilateralis brevis. Ovarium lineare, tenuiter puberulum. Mrinvanao, District of Davao, Santa Cruz, De Vore & Hoover 250, April, 1903, growing on the sandy beach. Millettia stipulata Dunn sp. nov. A speciebus ceteris Philippinensibus stipulis persistentibus reflexis falcatis distincta. Arbor 20 m alta praeter inflorescentiam omnino glabra, cortice rugoso griseo, ligno flavo. Folia bijuga 20 cm longa ; stipulae persistentes, oblongae, falcatae, reflexae, 4 mm longae; foliola late ovata, gradatim breviter caudata, basi obtusa vel truncata, ad 10 cm longa, papyracea, subtus glaucescentia, nervis utrinque 6, valde arcuatis ; petioli 5 mm longi; stipellae nullae. Racemi axillares 7 cm longi, pedun- culis 1- ad 2-plo longiores, rachidi ut pedicellis, eaycibus, petalisque laxe sparseque pubescenti. Flores 10 ad 12 mm longi, pedicellis filiformibus 6 ad 8 mm longis. Calyx breviter campanulatus, fere truncatus tandem patulis; bracteolae minutae hirsutae. Petala alba; vexilli lamina ovata, ecallosa, basi plicata, in unguem brevem angustata ; alae semisagittatae ; carina cuneato-oblonga. Stamina monadelphia. Ovarium lineare, paul- lo ad apicem tenuiter pubescens, basi disci papillis cinctum. Luzon, Province of Bulacan, Angat, For. Bur. 11140 Aguilar, March, 1908. Millettia capillipes Dunn sp. nov. Affinis M. Merrillii Perk. sed foliis bijugis differt. Frutex 5 m altus praeter ovarium omnino glaber, cortice griseo. Folia bijuga, 15 ad 20 em longa, exstipulata; foliola superiora lateralia lanceolata, apice grada- tim acuminata basi acuta, 6 ad 10 cm longa, chartacea, nervis utrinque 5 ad 7 subtus paullo prominulis; petioluli 4 ad 5 mm longi; stipellae nullae. Racemi axillares, 10 ad 12 cm longi, laxiflori. Flores 1- vel PHILIPPINE MILLETTIAS, 317 2-ni, 1 cm longi; pedicelli capillacei, 4 ad 6 mm longi, sub flore minute bibracteolati. Calyx breviter campanulata, truncata. Petala rubida. Vexilli lamina rotundo-ovata, basi fortiter bicallosa truncata, in unguem subito angustata. ‘Alae carinaque oblongae basi in unguem angustatae. Stamina monadelphia vexillari basi soluto. Ovarium sessile pubescens. Luzon, Province of Isabela, Cabagan River, For. Bur. 18549 Alwarez, April, 1909, growing on the banks of the stream, flowers pink, THE PHILIPPINE JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, C. BoTany. Vol. VI, No. 5, November, 1911. ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, III. By C. B. Ropinson. (From the Botanical Section of the Biological Laboratory, Bureau of Science, : Manila, P. I.) This paper will be devoted in its entirety to miscellaneous descriptions or notes upon various genera or species which have been accumulated at various times. The most noteworthy point is the discovery in the Phil- ippines of the genus Pimelea, whose many species are confined to the Australian region, except that herein described and one from Timor. MORACEAE. FICUS Linn. Ficus sericea sp. nov. § Sycidium. . Arbor magna: receptaculis sessilibus, axillaribus, magnis, ellipsoideis, extus sericeis: foliis chartaceis, glabris, admodum magnis, elliptico- oblongis vel subovalibus, basi cordatis, subpeltatis, apice breviter acu- minatis. Bracts lunate or nearly plano-convex, very broadly rounded at the apex, 3.5 mm long, 8 mm wide, imbricate, clasping, tomentose: receptacles axillary, sessile, ellipsoid, 3.5 cm long, 2 em in diameter, densely yellow- ish-villose-tomentose with hairs up to 4 mm long on the outside, very sealy within: staminate flowers unknown: pistillate perianth-segments 4, linear or linear-lanceolate, 2 mm long, 0.2 mm wide, long-attenuate or more rarely rounded at the apex, costa prominent ; ovary sessile, ellip- soid, about 1.3 mm long, gradually attenuate into an undivided style of equal or slightly greater length. : ; A tree 24 m high, the trunk 70 cm in diameter, the ultimate branches yellowish, annulate, rather densely villose-pubescent: petioles 3 to 4 em long, 3.5 to 4 mm wide, with more scattered villose pubescence; lamina chartaceous, glabrous, subpeltate, elliptic-oblong or nearly oval, 20 to 28 cm long, 12 to 14 cm wide, the base cordate, the sinus very narrow, 1 cm deep, its sides overlapping on the upper side of the petiole, slightly undulate or entire on the margins, the apex forming a very shot obtuse acumen or an: acute acumen 15 mm long; two pairs of veins eran : : tags BIOs) 320 ROBINSON. from the costa at or very near the insertion of the petiole, but the upper pair no longer and the lower pair shorter than all except the apical of the succeeding 13 to 16 pairs, these veins uniting to from a definite arched submarginal vein, secondary veins numerous and conspicuous; stipules lanceolate, 3.8 to 4 cm long, 9 to 12 mm wide, acuminate at the apex, truncate at the base, entire or near the apex denticulate, purplish within, tomentose without, sometimes membranaceous-winged. Minpanao, District of Davao, Santa Cruz, Williams 2883. Very distinct among Philippine species, but closely allied to F. conspicabilis King, from which it differs in the shape of the receptacles, and the more cordate leaves with more numerous veins. Local name (Bagobo) : maidong. URTICACEAE. ELATOSTEMA Forst. pro parte. Additional results of the dissection of staminate flowers of this genus are here given. It is unfortunate that so few pentamerous species are represented by sufficient material to justify dissection on a large scale. So far as this has been possible, they have been equally constant. The 39 flowers counted of Z. delicatulum were all that could be obtained from 24 receptacles, taken from 12 different plants. | Collection number. Species. 3-merous.|4-merous.|5-merous. | pea gi Phil. Pl. 233 E. spinul 45 | Merrill 6911 E. heterophyl 14 | Bur. Sei. 9480.......---_| E. obtusi : | Bur. Sei. 14138 B, Gelicatulum 3. ss ew 39 oo BASU 199 HB etrideseeng csc ee 100: hee Elatostema acrophilum C, B, Rob. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 5 (1911) Bot. 523. This has a close ally in E. obliquifolium Rechinger,; of Samoa, as represented by Vaupel 209. The leaves of FE. obliquifolium are distinctly more reduced on the narrower side than are those of EH. acrophilum, the upper surface has more conspicuous cystoliths, the veins of the under surface are pubescent, the marginal teeth are less coarse, and the veins are closer, the stem also is more pubescent. {n some of these respects, HB. obliquifolium comes closer to BE. microphyllum Elmer, but that species has much less oblique leaves. , _LAPORTEA Gaudich. Laportea meyeniana (Walp.} Warb. in Perk. Fragm. Fl. Philip. (1904), 168. Urtica arborea Luzonis Camel ex Ray Hist. Pl. 3 (1704) App. 70. Camel’s description leaves little doubt that this is the species intended, at least in the main. Its undoubted stinging qualities and its alleged medicinal properties are mentioned. Two of the local names given by him, lipa and lipay ‘Engl. Bot. Jahrb. 25 (1898) 622; Bot. Zool. Exgeb. Samoa. Salomonins. 3 (1910) 100. ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 321 are still in use for Laportea meyeniana as well as for other species of the genus; sagay is recorded for L, crassifolia; the two others known to Camel, ligathun and apareaqua, seem to have dropped from use. They may not have been Philippine. LAURACEAE. LITSEA Lam. Litsea glutinosa (Lour.) comb. nov. Sebifera glutinosa Lour. Fl. Cochinch. (1790) 638. Litsea chinensis Lam. Encycl. 3 (1791) 574. Litsaea sebifera Pers. Syn. 2 (1807) 4. Litsea sebifera was based directly upon Loureiro’s species, which has been considered by practically all authors, beginning with Persoon, to be the same as Litsea chinensis Lam., although not the species called L. chinensis by Blume or Heyne. Another species identified with it has been G@labraria tersa Linn. Mant. (1771) 276, upon which Litsea tersa Merr. was based. Linnaeus’ species is based upon Lignwm laeve minus Rumph. Herb. Amboin. 3: 72, pl. 44. If Glabraria tersa Linn. is the same species as Sebifera glutinosa Lour., it is its oldest name, if not, it is doubtless the oldest name for some other species yet to be extricated. Both these generic names are older than Litsea, but the latter is among the nomina conservanda, except s0 far as Sebifera is concerned, it doubtless having been omitted because until recently the portion of the third volume of Lamarck’s Encyclopedia in which Litsea appeared was thought to have been published in 1789. In the description of Rumphius’ plate, he uses both Latin and local names not mentioned in the preceding text, and it is difficult to say whether he intended them as substitutes or as additional. The plate itself shows Glabraria tersa to have the flowers solitary or in fascicles of 2 or 3, leaves with acute bases, acutely acuminate apices, and 3 or 4 veins. Not only the Philippine material identified as L. chinensis Lam. or some supposedly equivalent species, but sheets from other countries, have a different inflorescence, although rarely a flower here and there may be solitary. The leaf-veins are more numerous, the leaves themselves broader, usually with a different base and always with a different apex. While there is every reason to believe that @labraria tersa has rightly been referred to Litsea, it seems to represent a quite different species from L. chinensis Lam. SAXIFRAGACEAE. POLYOSMA Blume. Polyosma retusa sp. Nov. Arbor: inflorescentiis terminalibus, racemoso-paniculatis ; floribus virl- dibus: foliis petiolatis, oblanceolatis, integris, basi acutis, apice retusis, mucronatis. ‘ Inflorescences terminal, about 8 cm long, the flowers arranged race- mosely or paniculately, peduncles, when any, about 2 mm long, pedicels about the same length, more or less covered with golden-olive pubescence, which is also present upon the rachis sparingly, upon the peduncles, pedicels, and calyx more densely, on the basal half of the outer surface of the petals very densely and on their apical half more sparingly ; bracts at the base of the pedicels and practeoles (usually 3 in number) at their 329 ROBINSON. apices lanceolate to ovate, up to 2 mm long: calyx-tube about 3 mm long; calyx-teeth 4, triangular, 1 mm long; petals 4, valvate, linear-oblong, 7.5 mm long, with a constant width of about 1.5 mm except in the apical 1 mm, where they are rounded to a somewhat hooded apex, their inner surface very densely covered with dirty-grayish pubescence; filaments 4, 3.5 mm long, except at the extreme base dilated and densely covered with grayish-yellow pubescence; anthers narrowly oblong, 2.5 mm long, the apex rounded, the margins of the connective pubescent on the dorsal surface ; style 6 mm long, the basal half pubescent, the apical half nearly glabrous and 4-grooved; stigma capitate, 0.75 mm in diameter; ovary 1-celled, with several small ovules on two parietal placentae; fruit ellip- soid or ellipsoid-ovoid, 15 mm long, 7 mm in diameter, apiculate and crowned by the persistent calyx, 1-celled, 1-seeded, glabrous. A tree 8 m high, the trunk 10 cm in diameter, the dried branchlets black, marked by the scars of fallen leaves, the vegetative parts glabrous except in the youngest stages: leaves opposite or subopposite, the petioles 10 to 13 mm long, the somewhat coriaceous lamina oblanceolate or elliptic oblanceolate, 4.5 to 8 cm long, 2 to 3 cm wide, the base cuneate or acutely acuminate, the margins entire, revolute, the apex retuse and mucronate; lateral veins on each side of the costa 10 to 15. Luzon, Province of Tayabas (Infanta), Mount Binuang, in mossy forest at 840 m elevation, Bur. Sci. 9362 Robinson. Distinguished from all other species of the genus by the retuse leaf-apex, a character which it shares with species of other genera in the same locality. EUPHORBIACEAE. CICCA Linn. Cicca disticha Linn. Mant. (1767) 124. Averrhoa acida Linn.,? a much older name than the above, was based directly upon Fl, Zeyl. 179, with no synonyms cited that were not also in the earlier publication, although some are omitted. The “Flora Zeylanica,” in its turn, was based on Hermann’s collection of plants and drawings, nearly all from Ceylon. The type of Averrhoa acida must accordingly be determined from Hermann. His volumes have been studied with great care by Trimen, and the following notes bear on the present question. “179. Averrhoa acida, Sp.428 * * * A. Caram- bola, L., var. ? (drawing).®’ “P. longifolius, Jacq. * * * is the ‘Nelli’ of Herm. Mus, 55, and therefore Fl. Zeyl. n. 179 (and the Averrhoa-acida of Linnaeus) ; but there is no specimen in Herb. Herm., and the drawing is by. no means characteristic.*” The identification of Averrhoa acida with Ciccd disticha is a very old one, going at least as far back as Willdenow,® but Mueller did not consider it in his monograph of the Euphorbiaceae. . The combination Phyllantin .. *8p. Pl. (1753) 498... - _ ‘Journ, Linn. Soc. Bot. 24 (1887) lage Sie SR _ *Handb. Fl. Ceylon 4 (1898) 26. Poe aed soy Pl. 4 a 332. a ‘ ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 323 acidus (Linn.) Skeels has recently been based upon it; this.is the first time that this has been published, but not the first that it has been used.° I am more than ever of the opinion that Cicca disticha should not be included in the genus Phyllanthus. Did the evidence seem conclusive as to the identity of Averrhoa acida with it, no other course would be left open than to form yet a new combina- tion. But however strong the evidence may be that in general the two conceptions were the same, Averrhoa acida must be held to be typified by Hermann’s drawing, and that would seem to throw the balance in another direction. There is further difficulty. Phyllanthus emblica Linn.’ has a long-standing acceptance for an important tree, but is also is based directly on the “Flora Zeylanica,” and Hermann’s drawing is not of the species to which the name is commonly attached, but of Cicca disticha.’ CLEISTANTHUS Hook. f. Cleistanthus bridelifolius C. B. Rob. in. Philip. Journ. Sci. 3 (1908) Bot. 191. This finds a close ally in a species of the Malay Peninsula, Cleistanthus tricho- carpa Ridl. Journ. As. Soc. Straits Branch 59 (1911) 167, represented here by three collections, from Setul, Perlis, and Kedah, Ridley 14886, 14884, 14884 respectively. The leaves of the Philippine species have different bases, are much more gradually acuminate, and the venation is different, but Ridley’s species is probably much its closest ally. Cleistanthus megacarpus sp. nov. Arbor: floribus monoicis, staminiferis sessilibus, glomeratis, pentameris, glabris; capsulis admodum carnosis, depresso-globosis, magnis, trilocu- laribus: foliis petiolatis, chartaceis, ellipticis vel oblanceolate-ellipticis, basi acutis, margine revolutis, apice acuminatis, venis utrinque 9 ad 10. Staminate flowers sessile in densely bracted clusters; calyx 4 mm long, divided for slightly more than half its length into 5 valvate lanceolate acuminate lobes; petals 5, inserted on the calyx beneath the sinuses of the lobes, about 1 mm long, the lower half conspicuously narrowed, the upper half spreading, 3-lobed, about 1 mm wide near the apex; disk occupying the calyx-tube and with a narrow free margin; androphore attaining 2 mm in length, shorter when younger; filaments 5, about 0.7 mm long; anthers broadly lanceolate, cordate at the base, about the same length as the filaments; rudimentary ovary lanceolate, about 1 mm long: capsules with a somewhat fleshy outer coat, but dehiscent, borne on a pedicel at- taining a length of 8 mm, circular in outline, in cross-section triangular with rounded angles and intervening grooves, 2 cm long, 2 cm across the sides of the triangle, 3-celled, with traces of 3 separate styles at the apex; seeds solitary in the cells, lanceolate-ovate in outline, rounded-triangular in cross-section, 13 mm long, 9 mm wide, cordate at the base. * Bull, U. S. Dept. Agric. PI. Ind. 148 ‘(Philip:) 8 (1908) 41.0 oe Sp. Pl. (1753) 982. ~ rae Dae Trimen in Journ, Linn, Soe, Bot. 24 (1887) 149; Handb. Fl. Ceylon 4 (1898) (1909) 17, Merr, in Publ. Govt. Lab. 324 ROBINSON. Glabrous trees, attaining a height of 10 m and a trunk-diameter of 12 em, the ultimate branches with striate brownish or grayish-green bark: petioles 10 to 13 mm long; lamina chartaceous, elliptic or oblanceolate- elliptic, 15 to 25 cm long, 7.5 to 8.5 cm wide, acute at the base, the margins slightly recurved and usually slightly undulate, the apex prolonged into an acumen, which is more often slender and sometimes sharply acute, upper surface plumbeous, under surface paler and when young usually glaucous ; pairs of lateral veins 9 to 12, all except those near the apex of the lamina nearly straight except close to midrib and margin, not forming a submarginal vein. Mrnporo, Camantigue, Bongabong River, Whitford 1443 (type) ; Daihagan River valley, For. Bur. 3716 Merritt; south of ‘Lake Naujan, For. Bur. 6727 Merritt; Puli River, For. Bur. 12204 Rosenbluth ; growing in humid forests at low elevations. This approaches among Philippine species the one doubtfully identified as C. myrianthus Kurz, but differs in its venation, and all our specimens provisionally named as C. myrianthus are too imperfect for their exact position to be ascertained. Cleistanthus mindanaensis sp. nov. Arbor Cleistantho isabellino Elmer affinis, sed differt foliis majoribus, crassioribus, minus acuminatis, nervis pluribus. Flowers borne in axillary clusters surrounded at the base by numerous small ferruginous-pubescent bracts: staminate flowers on short thick pedicels; calyx at first united, at full anthesis 2.5 mm long, divided nearly to the base into 5, coriaceous, ovate, obtuse or subacute lobes; petals 5, 0.7 to 1 mm long, widened upward, denticulate along the upper margin; disk large, fleshy, entire or obscurely lobed ; androphore wanting in young flowers, becoming about 2 mm long to the insertion of the fila- ments; filaments 5 or rarely 6, 1.5 mm long; anthers ovate, up to 1.3 mm long; rudimentary ovary sessile on the top of the androphore, ovate in outline, 0.8 mm long, with 3 rudimentary styles about 0.4 mm long; the flowers and pedicels glabrous: pistillate flowers not seen: fruiting calyx and corolla similar to that of the staminate flowers, the disk thin- ner; fruit apparently succulent, red, globose, seen up to 13 mm in dia- meter, lightly 6-ridged, 3-celled, the persistent styles 3, separate, 1.5 mm long, shortly bifid; seeds not developed. ; A tree, 12 to 18 m high, the trunk 15 to 18 cm in diameter, the ultimate branches terete or at the apex somewhat angled, the bark gray or brownish-gray, densely and minutely pubescent toward the apex, gla- brescent below: petioles stout, 7 to 10 mm long, obscurely annulate, pubescent or glabrous; lamina coriaceous, oblong or elliptic, 8.5 to 15 em long, 3 to 5.5 cm wide, the base acute, the margins entire, the apex forming an obtuse acumen usually about 8 mm long; upper surface green, shining, under surface paler when glabrescent but when young densely covered with cinnamon-colored pubescence; veins 10 to 13 pairs, ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 325 evident on both surfaces, projecting on the lower, arching and anastomo- sing but hardly forming a submarginal vein, finer reticulation also evident. Minpanao, District of Zamboanga, Port Banga, For. Bur. 9474 (type), 9444 Whitford & Hutchinson. This species was deliberately omitted from my previous summary of the genus on the ground that the unusually soft fruits might entitle it to generic segregation. It differs in no other respect from typical Cleistanthus. It is closely allied to C. isabellinus Elmer, from Sibuyan, differing in the characters noted above, and in the much stouter branches. j : Cleistanthus misamisensis sp. nov. Arbor praecedenti affinis, sed differt floribus staminiferis minoribus, stylis basi coalitis, foliis chartaceis, ramulis tenuioribus. Staminate and pistillate flowers borne together in clusters surrounded by numerous very short ferruginous bracts: staminate flowers on very short stout glabrous pedicels; calyx at anthesis 2 mm long, split about two-thirds of the distance to the base into 5 ovate obtuse glabrous lobes; petals 5, obovate, denticulate toward the acuminate apex; disk thin, slightly 10-lobed; androphore thick, seen up to a length of 1 mm to the insertion of the filaments; filaments 5, 1.5 mm long; anthers ovate, 0.8 mm long; rudimentary ovary subglobose continuing without evident contraction into 3 styles, in all 1 mm long: fruiting calyx similar to that of the staminate flowers; petals also subsimilar; fruit probably less suc- culent than in C. mindanaensis, green, seen up to 7 mm in diameter, 3-celled ; style usually more or less damaged, but enough remaining to show with certainty that it is united for about 1 mm and then forms 3 arms of shorter length, no trace of bifurcation remaining. A tree, 4 m high, its trunk 15 cm in diameter, the branches and branchlets slender, bark gray or yellowish-gray, glabrous except around the inflorescences: petioles fairly stout, 3.5 to 7 mm long, annulate, glabrous; lamina chartaceous, elliptic or oblong, 11.5 to 18.5 cm long, 5 to over % cm wide, the base obtuse or very slightly emarginate, the margins entire, the apex forming an obtuse acumen 7 or 8 mm long; upper surface somewhat olivaceous-green, shining, under surface paler, minutely pubescent; pairs of veins 9 to 13, evident on both surfaces, projecting on the lower, they and the minor venation much as in C. mindanaensis, but the reticulations. somewhat laxer. Mrnpanao, Province of Misamis, Hligan, at 50 m elevation, For. Bur. 15463 Pray & Cenabre. Ahern 577, from Tetuan, Zamboanga, Mindanao, is almost certainly the same, but is sterile. The species has much similarity to C. min- danaensis, but seems distinct by reason of the characters already noted. Cleistanthus myrianthoides sp. nov. : ; Arbor: Cleistantho myriantho Kurz habitu proxime accedens, sed dif- fert floribus semper pedicellatis, stylis 2, et notis aliis minus conspicuis. Flowers monoecious, both kinds on pedicels 1.5 to 5 mm long in the same rather few-flowered glomerules, subtended at the base by short 326 ROBINSON. ovate obtuse bracts; the bracts, pedicels, and calyx-tube densely ferru- ginous-pubescent, the calyx-lobes less densely : calyx of staminate flowers divided nearly to the base into 5 triangular-ovate lobes 2 mm long, often 3-veined; petals 5, oblong-oblanceolate, about 1 mm long, the apex rounded or subtruncate, only obscurely sinuate; disk rather thin, with ‘a free truncate rim, undulate in vertical view; androphore seen up to 1.3 mm long; filaments 5, 0.5 mm long; anthers ovate, cordate, 0.7 mm long; rudimentary ovary elliptic or nearly oblong in outline, showing by difference of color or slight enlargement traces of a stylar portion, the latter most obscurely 4-lobed: calyx of pistillate flowers 2.5 mm long, acuminate; petals oblong; disk nearly covering the ovary, 10-lobed on the margin nearest the styles; ovary ovoid, glabrous, minutely tuberculate, 1 mm long, containing 2 cells each with 2 ovules; styles 2, very shortly united at the base, free for about 1 mm, thence bifurcate for about 0.5 mm, the arms curved or one in each pair straight. _ A tree 7 m high, its trunk-diameter 10 cm; the bark of the branches purplish, scaly, marked by lenticels, bark of the branchlets yellowish or reddish, the very youngest parts slightly pubescent, elsewhere glabrous: petioles 7 to 9 mm long; lamina when dried thinly chartaceous, oblong- lanceolate, broadly lanceolate, or nearly elliptic, 7 to 15 cm long, 3 to 6 cm wide, nearly equilateral, the base obtuse, the margins slightly sinuate, the apex contracted, usually very gradually, into an acute or subobtuse acumen, more often about 15 mm long, but with about 10 mm variation on either side, upper surface shining, glabrous, under surface paler, minutely but densely pubescent ; pairs of veins 8 to 11, slender, connected by numerous transverse veins, these evident on both surfaces, the finer venation evident on the under only. Luzon, Province of Camarines, Caramoan, San Roque, For. Bur. 10679 Curran, growing at low elevations, used for posts. The specimen has very great similarity in general appearance to 0. myrianthus Kurz, but the floral characters cited seem to prevent its inclusion in that species. Even very immature flowers are pedicelled, occasional minute ones are not; the number of styles was constant in 10 flowers examined for the purpose, and all of these were in good condition, so that it was possible to be certain that this was not the result of mechanical injury. With - this is correlated the difference in the ovary, and perhaps that in the rudimentary ovary. Loval name: sacatan, Cleistanthus pilosus sp. nov. Arbor, ramulis dense ferrugineo-pilosis: floribus ignotis; capsulis distanter spicatis, bracteatis, 3-locularibus, triangulari-rotundatis, in sin- ubus dense aliter laxiuscule pilosis: foliis brevissime petiolatis, chartaceis, oblongo-lanceolatis vel oblongis, basi emarginatis, apice obtuse acuminatis, venis utrinque 8 yel 9. Fruiting calyces sessile on ferruginous-pilose lateral branches-2 to 3 cm long, surrounded by ovate, acuminate, pilose bracts; calyx 4 to 5 mm ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 327 long, divided for about three-fourths to four-fifths the distance to the base into 5, narrowly lanceolate, densely ferruginous-pilose lobes ; petals oval, 1.5 mm long, pilose-ciliate; disk forming 5 semicircular lobes, rounded at the apex, 1.5 mm in diameter, densely pilose ; capsule in cross-section triangular, but the 3 lobes broadly rounded, 9 mm long, 12 mm along the sides of the triangle, more or less densely pilose in the sinuses and at the base and apex, elsewhere with scattered hairs or glabrescent ; styles united for about 0.5 mm, the rest fallen; seeds not developed. Presumably a tree, the branches and branchlets slender, the bark pur- plish, densely pubescent: petioles 1 to 3 mm long; lamina chartaceous, oblong or oblong-lanceolate, 6 to 11 cm long, 22 to 40 mm wide, the base emarginate, the margins entire or very obscurely sinuate, the apex form- ing a blunt acumen 5 to 12 mm long, upper surface a rather dull bluish- green, glabrous or with scattered hairs on the costa, under surface brown- ish, densely pubescent on the costa near its base, sparingly pubescent or glabrous on the middle part of the costa and the principal veins; pairs of veins 8 or 9, strongly arched, the secondary veins lax, conspicuous on the under surface, but on the upper no more evident than the. finer reticu- lations, which are hardly visible beneath. . Bastian, For. Bur. 19511 Almagro. Rather distinct amongst Philippine species, approaching closest to C. vidalit and C. everettii, distinguished from the former by the more evident venation, less acuminate leaves, and pubescence, from the latter by shorter petioles, different venation, more pubescent branches, less pubescent capsules, and the nature of the inflorescence. It is much more widely separated from ©. gracilis, than is C. vidalii. ; Cleistanthus vidalii C. B. Rob. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 3 (1908) Bot, 193. Cleistanthus blancoi Vidal Rev. Pl. Vase, Filip. (1886) 234, non Rolfe in Journ. Linn. Soe. Bot. 21 (1884) 315. , This approaches rather closely to 0. gracilis Hook. f., as represented by Ridley 14900, from Perlis, Malay Peninsula. The leaves of @. vidalit are larger and usually oblong-lanceolate, but some of each species are identical in shape and nearly in size, but in these the base of the Philippine species is more obtuse; the terminal acumen is slightly more prolonged proportionally in 0. gracilis. In both: the venation is inconspicuous, a little more evident in the Philippine plants, where the number of veins is greater. GLOCHIDION Forst. The oldest name for this, after 1753 as a separate genus, seems to be Agyneia Linn, Linnaeus published ° two species, considered by Muel- ler ?° and subsequent authors to be varieties of one, referable to the sec- tion Hemiglochidion, although Mueller himself cites it as synonymous not with that section but with Euglochidion. Nevertheless, the generic name Agyneia has been continued in use, not for the species which were so-called by Linnaeus, but for others considered to belong to a different \ ° Mant, (1771) 161. ‘ » DC. Prodr. 15.* (1862) 239, 307. 328 ROBINSON. genus. On any possible interpretation of types, the name Agyneia would have to be substituted for Glochidion, as it is 5 years older, nor is there any bar to such a course in the adopted lists of nomina conservanda. Glochidion benguetense Elmer Leafl. Philip. Bot. 1 (1908) 304. This finds a close ally in @. leiostylwm King. The stylat column is of the same general nature in the two species, but in the Philippine plants is shorter and less deeply cleft, the difference being sufficient to maintain them as distinct. The leaves are also very similar, in outline, apex, and venation; those of G. benguetense are usually more inequilateral and obtuse at the base, average smaller in size, and there are fewer of them on a branchlet. Glochidion cagayanense sp. nov. § Hemiglochidion. Arbuscula: floribus solitariis vel paucis fasciculatis: calyce alte 6- partito, sezmentis lanceolatis, obtusis vel subacutis, pistilliferorum long- ioribus ; antheris 3; ovario pubescente, triloculare; stylo basi ovario sub- aequilato sed duplo longiore, apice leviter incrassato, trilobato: foliis lanceolatis, basi acutis vel rarius obtusis, apice saepius admodum falcatis, acute acuminatis. Flowers solitary or few in a fascicle, the only staminate one seen near the apex of a branch: staminate flower shortly pedicelled; perianth- segments 6, lanceolate; anthers 3: pistillate pedicels attaining a length of 8 mm, conspicuously thickened: at the apex ; perianth-segments 6, lan- ceolate, obtuse or subacute, 2 mm long, pubescent or glabrous; ovary 3-celled, densely pubescent, 0.6 mm long, 0.8 mm in diameter, globose or depressed-globose; stylar column not constricted at the base, there slightly narrower than the ovary, in all about 1.2 mm long, the basal portion cylindric, very slightly widened at the apex and forming 3 thickened obtuse lobes: capsule pubescent or glabrescent, 6 mm long, 1 cm in diameter, 3-celled. A small tree, 4 m high, its slender ultimate branches covered with _ grayish bark, the branchlets, petioles, and the bases of the costas of the leaves more or less pubescent: petioles 2 to 3 mm long; lamina charta- ceous, lanceolate or broadly lanceolate, 7 to 12.5 em long, 1.5 to 5 em wide, acute or obtuse at the usually strongly inequilateral base, the apex usually slightly faleate, forming an acute acumen ; pairs of veins 6 to 9, strongly arched, the more basal not uniting with those next above by strong anasto- moses, the more apical forming a fairly definite submarginal vein; uppeT surface plumbeous, under surface brownish ; stipules lanceolate, subfal- cate, 2.5 to 3 mm long. : : : Luzon, Province of Cagayan, Claveria, Bur. Sci. 7390 Ramos (type) ; Missiones River, For. Bur, 16715 Qurran; Mount Ababaca, For. Bur. 16726 Qurran. The pubescence of the perianth-segments and other parts of the flowers shows consid- erable variation, but almost its whole range can be found at consecutive nodes of the same branch. In the extreme, the base of the style is also pubescent. Among Philippine species, this is best placed between G. longistylum and G. tricho- gynum, being intermediate between these in the lobing of the styles, differing also ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, II. 329 from the former by its 3-celled ovary, and from the latter by the more horny texture of the walls of the capsules. It is not likely to be mistaken for either on casual inspection, as its leaves are thinner and of different shape from those of @. longistylum, smaller, narrower, and more faleate than those of G@. tricho- gynum. Tt resembles G. brunnewm Hook. f. in its leaves and general appearance of the styles, but the latter has 5 or 6 anthers, a different inflorescence, and the ovary is 4- to 6-celled. Glochidion curranii C. B. Rob. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 4 (1909) Bot. 102. This has great general resemblance to a New Guinea species, Glochidion gla- _brum J. J. Smith,” but the pistillate flowers are different. The inner lobes of the perianth are very strikingly shorter than the outer, whereas in the Philip- pine plants, this difference, although noted in the original description, is quite slight. There are other less important differences, but the two species should be considered closely allied, unless more emphasis is laid on this character than has ordinarily been done. Glochidion ligulatum sp. nov. § Hemiglochidion. Frutex: floribus pistilliferis axillaribus, fasciculatis, vel in ramis axil- laribus brevissimis suffultis; perianthio alte 6-partito, segmentis lanceo- latis, acutis; ovario triloculare; stylo basi parum ovarie altius latiore, | multo longiore, apice trilobato, lobis saepe bifidis: foliis chartaceis, an- guste ellipticis vel anguste oblanceolatis, utrinque acutis, glabris. Staminate flowers unknown: pistillate flowers in threes or fours, in axillary fascicles or upon axillary branches about 2 mm long; the bracts sometimes ciliate, the plant otherwise glabrous ; pedicels about 0.5 mm long; perianth about 1.8 mm long, divided nearly to the base into 6 lan- ceolate, barely imbricate, nearly acute segments; petals and disk none; ovary globose, 0.5 mm in diameter, 6-grooved, 3-celled, each cell 2-ovuled, passing with very slight narrowing into a fleshy ligulate or oblanceolate style 2.5 to 3 mm long, 0.8 mm in diameter above the middle, somewhat 3-angled, divided for about 0.5 mm at the apex into 3 lobes, which are nearly always shortly 2-cleft at their apices: capsule not seen beyond 2.5 mm in diameter, still 6-grooved, 3-celled, the cells 2-seeded. A glabrous shrub, 1 m high, the bark of the branches and branchlets gray, more or less mingled with dark-brown : petioles about 2 mm long; lamina chartaceous, but firm, narrowly elliptic or narrowly oblanceolate, 6.5 to 11 em long, 1 to 1.7 em wide, the inequilateral base acute and decurrent, the margins revolute, the apex straight or slightly falcate, barely or not acuminate, acute, mucronate ; pairs of veins 8 to 10, slender, their ends forming a widely arching submarginal vein; other venation rather lax, evident; stipules about 1.5 mm long, the base ovate, short, the apex acicular. Luzon, Province of Ilocos Norte, Mount Dagat, Bur. Sci. 7746 Ramos. The section is inferred from its apparent alliances, especially among Philippine species, with @. longistylum, which has a longer and narrower style, 4-celled ovary, and 4 Rés, Exped. Neerl, Nouv. Guin. 8 (1910) 224, pl. 53. Ya 330 ROBINSON. more coriaceous leaves. The closest extra-Philippine alliance .is probably with Glochidion podocarpum (Muell.-Arg.), (Phyllanthus podocarpus Muell.-Arg.) ,* of Fiji, which has a 6-celled ovary, a comparatively broader style, and ovate- lanceolate leaves, Glochidion philippicum (Cav.) Benth. Fl. Hongkong. (1861) 314 (G@. philip- pinense) ; C. B. Rob. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 4 (1909) Bot. 103. The range of this species extends from Formosa to Southern New Guinea.* Henry 713 is the basis for the northeastern extension. The flowers are young, at least on our specimen, but taken with the leaves, make the identification reasonably certain. I have also seen some of the collections on which Mr. Smith credited the species to New Guinea, and cannot but agree with him. Glochidion weberi sp. nov. § Huglochidion. Frutex pubescens: monoicum, floribus fasciculatis, staminiferis pedi- cellatis, pistilliferis sessilibus sed fructibus pedicellatis; antheris 4 vel 5; columna stylare breve, rotundata, umbilicata, quam ovarium angustiore, basi haud constricta: foliis oblongis, oblongo-lanceolatis, vel oblongo- ovatis, basi obtusis vel truncatis, apice acuminatis, venis utrinque 6 ad 13; stipulis anguste triangulari-lanceolatis, longis. Flowers of both kinds borne in the same fascicles, the pistillate fewer, earlier developing: staminate pedicels about 3 mm long, rather stout, glabrous on the basal half, pubescent above; sepals 6, the 3 outer broadly lanceolate, fleshy, 2 mm long, obtuse at the apex, pubescent on the outer surface; inner sepals similar in size and outline but still thicker, with a short broad basal claw, thickened at the apex, glabrous or pubescent on the costa only; stylar column in all about 1.5 mm long, the anthers 4 or 5, about one and a half times the length of the produced connective: pistillate flowers sessile at anthesis, but the pedicels in fruiting about 8 mm long ; sepals 6 or 7, the inner and outer similar, lanceolate or ovate, 2 to 3 mm long, acuminate or acute, somewhat falcate, with long pubescence on the outer surface; ovary depressed-globose, about 1 mm long and 1.5 mm in diameter, with dense pubescence, concealing the styles, the latter narrower than the ovary, 0.6 mm long, 0.8 mm wide, rounded and umbilicate at the apex, obscurely 5-grooved; fruiting calyx usually closely embracing the base of the capsule or slightly spreading or reflexed ; capsules red, obovoid, about 2 cm long and slightly wider, umbilicate at the apex, 10-celled, pubescent ; seeds 6 to 7 mm long, 4.5 to 5.5 mm wide, flattened on one side, rounded on the other, the testa smooth, brownish. A bush, 1 m high, the stem 1 cm in diameter, densely pubescent, bark of the stems gray, of the branches blackish, but both obscured by the pubescence; the hairs alike on vegetative and reproductive parts pale- golden to tawny in color, 1 to 2 mm long, often several-celled : petioles * Flora 48 (1865) 370; DC. Prodr. 15* (1862) 310. . _ See J. J. Smith in Koord. & Val. Bijdr. Boomsort, Jav. 12 (1910) 141. ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 331 stout, about 2 mm long, densely pubescent; lamina chartaceous, oblong, oblong-lanceolate, or oblong-ovate, variable in size, more often 14.5 to 23 em long, 4.5 to 8.5 cm wide, but down to 6 to 8 cm long, 3 to 4 cm wide, with intermediates, the base obtuse or truncate, nearly inequilateral but one side often produced slightly beyond the other, the apex acutely acuminate, both surfaces drying brownish but the upper the darker, the upper densely pubescent, the under less so except on the veins; pairs of veins 6 to 13, anastomosing to form a definite arched vein near the margin, cross veins between the principal ones several, finer venation less conspic- uous; stipules narrowly triangular-lanceolate or long-acuminate from an ovate base, up to 11 mm long, pubescent-plumose. Mrnpanao, Subprovince of Agusan, west slope of Mount Hilonghilong, 0. M. Weber 1012, growing in rocky soil near a stream, at about 400 m elevation. G. weberi is very different from any Philippine species referable to the section Euglochidion, but resembles three belonging to Hemiglochidion, @. trichogynum, G. latistylum, and G. album, but apart from the number of anthers, it can be distinguished from all three by the styles, sharply in the case of the first. two, less definitely from the last, whose longer and more slender staminate receptacles furnish an additional character for separation, as do the staminate sepals and the stipules. Similarly with the species of other countries represented in this herbarium. On superficial inspection, only two would be thought worth compar- ing, G. superbum, which is in Hemiglochidion, and G@. decorum J. J. Smith, from New Guinea, whose anthers number 4. On a summary of characters, taken in what is considered the order of their relative importance, @. weberi seems to find its nearest alliance in @. multiloculare Muell.-Arg., but the species are very different in appearance. The most conspicuous characters are pubescence, the size, shape, base, and apex of the leaves; apart from these there are the stipules, pedicels, sepals, and nearly everything except the anthers, styles, and ovary-cells. Glochidion zeylanicum var. malayanum J. J. Smith in Koord. & Val. Bijdr. Boomsort. Jav. 12 (1910) 118. This species has been credited to the Philippines by Mr. Smith. He writes that he has seen only a single collection from these Islands that he believes referable to this species, but through some unfortunate slip in labeling, the number given by him is one that never existed, Ahern 1854. It is possible that it may be Ahern 189, which has much the general appearance of G. zeyla- nicum Juss. However, our sheet of that number has staminate .flowers, and the anthers number 3 or rarely 4, and I believe that it has been correctly referred to the species called by me G. album (Blanco) Boerl., with the qualifications that it may not have been the species intended by Blanco, and is almost certainly not that of Boerlage.* It is still more definitely @. leytense Elmer. This may not be the collection intended by Mr. Smith, but the number is more nearly similar to that on the sheet at Buitenzorg than is that of any other of our collections of Glochidion. It still seems to me that our nearest ally to G. zeylanicum is G. lancifolium C. B. Rob. This differs from Indian sere now in this herbarium by the more distinctly peduncled inflorescences, am somewhat in the base and apex of the leaves, but the descriptions of G. zeylanicum 4 See This Journal 4 (1909) Bot. 99, 100. 105264——-2 : Ae ’ 332 ROBINSON. are nearly wide enough to cover these characters. The leaves of G. lancifolium are nearly chartaceous, or sometimes rather thinner or somewhat thicker than would be indicated by that term, but they can not be described as coriaceous, as have been those of @. zeylanicum.* OSTODES Blume. Ostodes ixoroides sp. nov. Frutex vel arbuscula: inflorescentiis terminalibus vel lateralibus, pedunculis teneris, angulatis, longiusculis; floribus paucis, breviter pedi- cellatis, dioicis, pentameris: foliis breviter petiolatis, chartaceis, lanceola- tis, margine minute dentatis, basi cordatis, apice acuminatis. Inflorescences terminal or axillary, 4 to 20 cm long, slender, angled, their branches few and short, the dioecious flowers few and forming con- densed panicles at the apices of the branches of the inflorescence, with short more or less ciliate bracts: staminate flowers on very short pedicels ; calyx about 3 mm long, out about two-thirds of the distance to the base into 5, imbricate, ovate lobes, rounded at their apices; petals 5, free, . broadly oblanceolate, 6 mm long, rounded at the apex; disk-glands 5, free, about 0.4 mm long; filaments united to form a column, the outer 5 evident from its base, becoming free at a hight of 1 mm for an additional 0.5 mm, a second whorl at the apex of the column, free for about the same distance as the lower, total length of column to apices of anthers about 3 mm; anthers erect or nearly so, dorsifixed just above their bases, introrse, the cells separate, nearly parallel, the outer halves the longer, about 1 mm long, the connective produced beyond the cells; no rudi- mentary ovary present; pistillate flowers with a similar calyx, 4 to 6 mm long ; petals oval, broadly acuminate at the apex, 7 mm long; disk annular, short, its margin more or less sinuate, ovary subglobose, 2 mm in diameter, glabrous, deeply 6-grooved, 3-celled ; styles 3, united at the extreme base, but almost at once forked into 2 arms, in all about 2 mm long, usually nearly horizontal: capsule depressed-globose, 1 cm in diameter, deeply 3-grooved, 3-celled, each cell containing one seed about 6 mm long. A shrub or small tree, the vegetative parts entirely glabrous, the branches with brownish or grayish striate bark: leaves resembling those of Ixora chinensis Lam. ; petioles about 3 mm long; lamina chartaceous, lanceolate, 10 to 15 cm long, 2.5 to 5 em wide, the base cordate, the margins minutely dentate, the apices acuminate; pairs of veins 15 to 20, forming a definite submarginal vein and a fainter outer one. Luzon, Province of Ilocos Norte, Bangui, For, Bur. 13426 Klemme (type, pistillate flowers and capsules) ; Mount Dagat, Bur. Sci. 7747 Ramos (staminate flowers). The arrangement of the stamens suggests Trigonostemon rather than Ostodes, but the species falls within the limits of the latter. * Fl. Br. Ind. 5 (1887) 311. ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 333 PHYLLANTHUS Linn. Phyllanthus erythrotrichus sp. nov. § Paraphyllanthus. Suffrutex lignosus, erectus vel suberectus, ramis teretibus, apice tricho- matibus rubris longis obsitis: monoicis, floribus sessilibus vel brevissime pedicellatis, solitariis, minutis; staminiferi perianthii segmentis 5 vel 6, disci glandulis liberis, filamentis brevissimis, antheris 3, verticaliter dehis- centibus; pistilliferi perianthii segmentis 6, disco annulare breve, ovario glabro, stylis 3 liberis apice bilobatis: foliis subsessilibus, lanceolatis vel oblongo-lanceolatis, basi obtusis vel cordatulis, inaequilateralibus, apice mucronatis et capillo deciduo instructis. Flowers monoecious, solitary: staminate flowers with pedicels 0.1 to 0.2 mm long; perianth-segments 5 or 6, lanceolate or oblong-lanceolate, 0.5 to 0.8 mm long, obtuse at the apex; disk glands free, minute except in proportion to the size of the, flower; filaments very short but united ; anthers 3, 0.2 mm long, free, reaching to the base of the flower, dehisching vertically: pistillate flowers sessile, bracted; perianth-segments 6, oblong to obovate, 1 mm long, obtuse; disk annular; ovary depressed-globose, about 0.5 mm long, glabrous, 3-celled; styles 3, free from the base, up to about 0.5 mm long, at the apex shortly 2-lobed with distinct stigmas: capsule brown, glabrous, 2 mm long, 3 mm in diameter, 3-celled ; seeds plano-convex or somewhat gibbous, 1.3 mm long; testa yellowish, with an irregular row of usually elongate comparatively deep pits on the back and often equally developed but more circular pits on the sides. A woody undershrub, 7 to 25 cm high, the branchlets more crowded near the top, the terete reddish striate stem roughened by scales and the scars of fallen branchlets, the youngest parts and the branchlets shortly pubescent, the larger stems bearing at the apex tufts of reddish hairs 3 to Y mm long; pairs of leaves on a branchlet 15 to 18: the dis- tichous leaves with comparatively thick petioles about 0.3 mm long, the lamina lanceolate or oblong-lanceolate, 2.5 to 5 mm long, 0.7 to 1.8 mm wide, at the inequilateral base obtuse or slightly cordate, the margins distinctly thickened, simulating lateral veins, the apex mucronate and provided with a hair about 2 mm long, articulated, deciduous and rarely found, the upper surface bearing very short separate hairs resembling glands, the margins ciliolate, the under surface glaucous; venation dis- tinct, often purplish, about 6 lateral veins on each side with a definite sub- marginal vein ; stipules narrowly linear-lanceolate, conspicuous, very acute, 2 to 3 mm long. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, Mount Cura, at an elevation of 300 m, For. Bur. 16834 Curran (type): Subprovince of Bontoc, Linglagan, For. Bur. 10996 Curran; Gaddac, Vanoverbergh 739: Subprovince of Ifugao, Bila, Bur. Sci. 13542 H. 0. Beyer ; Tukukan, Bur. Sci. 13541 H. O. Beyer; Ahin, Bur. Sci. 13543 H. 0. Beyer: Subprovince of Benguet, Mount Pulog, For. Bur. 16148 Curran, Merritt, & 2s 834 ROBINSON. Zschokke: Province of Pampanga, Mount Abu, Bur. Sci. 1918 Foxworthy: Province of Rizal, Montalban, Phil. Pl. 47 Merrill, Bur. Sct. 9542 Robinson. In the general alliance of P. urinaria Linn. coming closest to P. benguetensis, but distinguished from it by the much smaller and differently shaped leaves. The largest-leaved specimens get close to P. greenei Elmer, but even in this comparison the branchlets of the latter are thicker, and more definitely angled, and glabrous, and the leaves are of slightly different shape. Local names (Ifugao): uguggip, giwi-giwi. Phyllanthus macgregorii sp. nov. § Hriococcus. Frutex: floribus pistilliferis longiter pedicellatis, fasciculatis; perian- thio 6-partito, segmentis ovatis vel ovalibus, integris; disco subintegro; ovario triloculare, glabro; stylis alte bifidis, reclinatis: foliis lanceolatis vel ellipticis, basi obtusis, apice breviter acuminatis. Pistillate flowers in axillary fascicles; peduncles slender, dilated at the apex, glabrous, 17 to 32 mm long, arising from crowded, very small, ovate, pubescent bracts: calyx 1.7 to 2 mm long divided for about two-thirds of the distance to the base into 6, entire, glabrous, oval or ovate, acuminate segments ; disk nearly flat, thin, on vertical view slightly undulate; ovary depressed-globose, about 1.3 mm in diameter, glabrous, 3-celled ; styles 3, forked almost or quite to the base, the arms reclining on the ovary, about 0.7 mm long: capsule seen up to about 5 mm in diameter, similar to the ovary, the seeds not fully developed, their testa smooth. Probably a shrub, the branches terete, slightly ridged, the branchlets somewhat compressed, pilose along two opposite lines, the older shoots progressively glabrescent; bark dark-reddish, tending to grayish-brown _on the older shoots: petioles 1 to 2 mm long; lamina membranaceous or slightly thicker, lanceolate, elliptic, or oblong-lanceolate, 3.5 to 6 em long, 1.5 to 2.5 em wide, nearly equilateral, the base obtuse, the apex contracted into an acute or subacute, mucronulate acumen, about 2 to 3 mm long. or merely subacute, upper surface yellowish- or somewhat brownish-green, the under slightly paler, both glabrous; pairs of veins 10 to 15, slender, often little more conspicuous than the intermediates, uniting at their extremities to form an arched submarginal vein; stipules lanceolate- ‘acicular, less than 1 mm long, caducous. Bapuyanes Istanps, Dalupiri, Bur. Sci. 10128 McGregor. Two or three other species of Phyllanthus have been left undescribed, owing to the lack of one or the other kind of flowers, but P. macgregorii appears to be so closely allied to P. stipularis Merr. that its section may be predicted without the staminate flowers. From that species, it may be distinguished by the much smaller stipules, and, the less oblique leaves with much more crowded veins, and — of different outline and more uniform color on the two surfaces. In gener? appearance, P. macgregorii has even greater similarity to P. gracilipes Muell.-Arg: than to P. stipularis, but the calyx-segments of P. gracilipes are not entire, nor — is the ovary glabrous: it also is in the section Hriococcus. ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 335 Phyllanthus megalanthus sp. nov. § Hriococcus. Frutex glaber: floribus solitariis, pedicellatis, magnis; staminiferi perianthii segmentis integris 4, antheris 2, transverse dehiscentibus, glandulis liberis, approximatis; pistilliferi perianthii segmentis 6, inte- gris, ovario stipitato, depresso-globoso, 6-sulcato, 3-loculare: foliis sub- oblongis, inaequilateralibus, basi obtusis, apice acutis; stipulis lineari- lanceolatis. Flowers solitary, more often near the apices of the branchlets: stami- nate flowers on pedicels 2 to 3 mm long; calyx-segments 4, 2.5 to 4 mm long, entire, varying in outline from narrowly lanceolate to orbicular- ovate, the inner usually the shorter and wider; disk-glands 4, free but closely approximate, granular; staminal column attaining a length of 2 mm and a diameter:‘of 1 mm, the 4 anther-cells forming a ring at its apex and dehiscing transversely, inclosing a rudimentary ovary 0.3 to 0.5 mm long and 0.8 to 1.2 mm wide: pistillate flowers on pedicels 8 to 10 mm long; calyx-segments 6, entire, the outer oval, about 6 mm long, the inner obovate, about 7 mm long; disk-glands forming a more or less undulate ring, granular; ovary shortly stipitate, depressed-globose, glabrous, 1 mm long, 6-grooved, 3-celled; stylar column entire for about 1.2 mm, then 3-lobed for a slightly longer distance, the lobes bifid for about half their length and recurved: fruiting calyx enlarged, seen up to 13 mm long; stipe 1 mm long; capsule 3 mm long, 4 mm in diameter. A shrub, 1 m high, glabrous throughout, the branches roughened by the scars of fallen branchlets, covered with reddish bark, the branchlets tending to become crowded at the apex; about 20 pairs of leaves on each branchlet: petioles about 1 mm long; lamina membranaceous, nearly oblong, usually about 20 mm long and 7 mm wide, attaining 24 mm by 10 mm, usually inequilateral throughout its length, the base rounded on both sides or acute on the lower, the apex acute, the under surface much paler than the upper; stipules linear-lanceolate, 2 mm long, acute or sometimes forming an acute acumen for over half their length ; yenation pinnate, the thin veins about 6 pairs. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, Mount Alunleng-Bava, For. Bur, 17243 Curran, growing on exposed ridges at an elevation of 200 m. Among Philippine species, this comes nearest to P. stipularis Merr., from which it is at once distinguished by the size of the calyx. Its closest ally is P. macrocaly« Muell.-Arg., of India, which differs in having larger, equilateral leaves, narrower stipules, and smaller staminate flowers with united glands. See ; TRIGONOSTEMON Blume. Trigonostemon hirsutus sp. nov. § Eutrigonostemon, : Arbuscula hirsuta: inflorescentiis axillaribus ; floribus staminiferis in bractearum axillis fasciculatis, pistilliferis solitariis: foliis oblanceolatis, basi acutis, marginibus glandulosis spe denticulatis, apice breviter acu- minatis, subtus hirsutis; venis utrinque sepius 22. ae mt eH Shaw 336 ROBINSON. Dioecious, so far as known: staminate inflorescences 12 to 17 em long, axillary, the rachis slender, angled, yellow-hirsute, the bracts or clusters of bracts usually 1 to 2 cm apart; bracts lanceolate, or linear-lanceolate, 5 to 7 mm long, densely hirsute, usually accompanied by two or three similar bracts only 2 to 3 mm long, the flowers 10 or more to each large bract, clustered on very short pedicels, the pedicels after the fall of the flower thickened and hollowed at the apex: calyx imbricate, deeply 4- or 5-parted, the segments unequal, ovate to obovate, 1.5 to 2.5 mm long, sparingly pubescent on the outer surface, the margins entire, not glan- dular; petals yellowish-green, free, imbricate, 4 or 5, ovate to obovate, 2 to 2.5 mm long; disk at full anthesis shortly cupular, the margins as seen from above undulate; androphore nearly 1 mm long, the anthers 3, in all about 0.7 mm long, the connective parted nearly to the base and projecting shortly beyond the cells, the latter narrowly elliptic, about 0.5 mm long, extrorse, dehiscing longitudinally ; rudimentary ovary not present: infrutescence about 8 cm long, otherwise similar to the staminate inflorescence; fruiting pedicels solitary, about 1 cm long, thickened at the apex, hirsute, the basal recurved, the apical spreading; calyx deeply 5-parted, the segments lanceolate to oblanceolate, 3.5 to 4.5 mm long, hirsute: capsule depressed-globose, less conspicuously hirsute, about 8 mm long, over 1 em in diameter, 3-celled, the cells 1-seeded ; seeds about 6 mm long, 6.5 mm wide, the sides nearly flat, the dorsal surface rounded with rather faint longitudinal lines on the crustaceous purplish testa, the cotyledons about 5.5 mm wide, 1.5 mm thick, the radicle about 0.5 mm wide and thick. Tree-like in habit, but not known beyond 2 m in height, with stems 4 cm in diameter, the apex greenish, somewhat angled, brown-hirsute; leaves simple, alternate; petioles 12 to 35 mm long, hirsute; lamina submembranaceous, oblanceclate, 23 to 33 cm long, 5 to 9 cm wide, the base acute, the margins glandular and often crenulate, the apex abruptly contracted into a subacute acumen 5 to 20 mm long, upper surface sparingly hirsute, under surface rather densely hirsute, both very densely on young leaves; pairs of veins 21 to 24, arched and forming a vein near the margin; stipules lanceolate, hirsute, about 1 cm long. Minpanao, District of Zamboanga, Port Banga, Bur. Sci. 11798 Robinson (staminate flowers, type), For Bur. 9311 Whitford & Hutchinson (fruiting). The two collections are not identical, although certainly very closely allied. Direct comparison is possible only from the leaves, and those of the type are much more denticulate than the other. They are also very similar to the : following species, but the staminate perianth makes it impossible to place them together. Neither species is closely allied to 7. philippinensis Stapf, differing in inflorescence and leaves; both find a near ally in 1. villosus Hook. f., but have smaller flowers and larger and more numerously veined leaves. None of the flowers on the type are at the most desired stage, but the contrast between the youngest and oldest indicates a development similar to that in Cleistanthus. In : the youngest there is no trace of an androphore, this being well developed in over-mature flowers on the same plant. ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 337 Trigonostemon oblanceolatus sp. nov. § Hutrigonostemon. Arbuscula, praecedenti similis, floribus exceptis minus hirsuta, sed differt floribus staminiferis minus numerosis, calyce hirsuto, connectivo magis producto, petalis purpureis. Inflorescences about 26 cm long, the rachis angled and grooved, about 2 mm wide, densely hirsute, the flowers racemed, the pistillate solitary, the staminate solitary or very few; bracts lanceolate, 7 to 8 mm long, or shorter at the base and apex of the raceme, densely hirsute, usually ac- companied by a pair of much smaller bracts as in 7’. hirsutus: staminate flowers very shortly pedicelled; calyx deeply 5-parted, 2 mm long, or with the dense stiff yellowish pubescence 3 mm long, two of the segments lanceolate, subacute, the other three oblong-obovate, obtuse; petals dark- purple, free, 5, obovate, 3 mm long; disk shortly cupular, free for about 0.4 mm; androphore 1 mm long, the anthers 3, the connective free nearly to the base and strongly thickened and protruding beyond the cells, the latter narrowly oblong, 0.5 mm long, extrorse, dehiscing long- itudinally ; no rudimentary ovary: pistillate flowers on pedicels 9 to 10 mm long, hirsute, apically thickened; calyx deeply 5-parted, 5 to 7 mm long, the greater extreme including pubescence, three of the segments lanceolate, subacute, the other two membranaceous-margined, oval, obtuse ; disk shortly cupular, closely inclosing base of ovary; ovary densely pubescent, 2.5 mm long, 4 mm in diameter, 3-celled, the ovules solitary ; syles 3, 0.8 mm long, free from one another, deeply 2-parted. A tree about 3 m high, its stems 5 cm in diameter, the bark dirty- brownish, the apices greenish, angled, very slightly hirsute: leaves alter- nate, simple; petioles 10 to 18 mm long; lamina submembranaceous, oblanceolate, 29 to 31 cm long, 9 to 9.5 cm wide, the base acute, the margins merely obscurely sinuate with a very few inconspicuous glands, the apex forming a very short acumen; both surfaces inconspicuously hirsute, except the densely hirsute sides of the costa of the under surface; pairs of veins about 19, arched and forming a submarginal vein. Minpanao, District of Zamboanga, Sax River, at 150 m elevation, Williams 2185. In the opened flowers, the calyx-segments appear valvate with the excep- tion of the broader ones in the pistillate flowers; in one of these, petals were found loosely adhering to the sides of the ovary, which were quite similar to those of the staminate flowers. ANACARDIACEAE. MANGIFERA Linn. Mangifera verticillata sp. nov. Arbor magna: inflorescentiis terminalibus, composito-paniculatis, ramis ramulisque tomentosis, valde tetragonis, verticillatis vel subverticillatis ; floribus dioicis, pentameris ; staminiferorum sepalis liberis, petalis basi ima connatis; stamine uno, staminodiis 4; disco subnullo: foliis verti- 338 ROBINSON. cillatis, longiuscule petiolatis, coriaceis, elliptico-obovatis, basi valde decurrentibus, apice breviter acuminatis; venis utrinque circiter 25. Staminate inflorescences terminal, 20 to 30 cm long, the rachis, branches and branchlets strongly 4-angled, with grayish-brown tomentum, the branches of the rachis except near its apex verticillate or subverticillate in fours, those of the lowest whorl up to about 12 em long, those of the second whorl about 8.5 em long, the secondary branches opposite or subopposite, rarely alternate, variable in length, the lower about 2 em long, tertiary branches about 1 cm long; all above measurements includ- ing flowers ; the flowers clustered at the apices of the tertiary branches, the pedicels stout, tomentose, about 0.5 mm long, the bracteoles ovate, obtusely acuminate, 2 mm long, densely pubescent on the outer surface; bracts at the base of the rachis very numerous (judging by their scars), caducous, coriaceous, the base ovate, 3 mm long, contracted into an acute acumen about 4 mm long: sepals 5, free, oblong to ovate, imbricate, obtuse or truncate at the apex, 1.5 to 2 mm long, ciliate; petals 5, imbricate, narrowly oblanceolate, up to Y mm long, obtuse or barely apiculate at the apex, the margins usually inrolled, glabrous, the costa very conspicuous, otherwise veinless, at the extreme base more or less connate; fertile stamen one, its filament eventually exserted, up to 8 mm long, hardly dilated at the base, usually 4 staminodes of irregular shape 1.5 to 2 mm long at the base of the petals, the bases of the petals, stamen, and sta- minodes forming a short floral axis around a minute disk: pistillate flowers unknown: fruit said to be similar to that of Mangifera indica, but larger, edible. Said to be a very large tree, with extremely poisonous juice; the ultimate branches rather obscurely tetrangular, with less conspicuous intervening ridges, 12 to 13 mm in diameter at the nodes, very con- spicuously marked by the scars of fallen petioles; bark greenish-gray, tomentellose or glabrescent: leaves in whorls of four; petioles 3.5 to 5 cm long, 3.5 to 4 mm wide below the extreme base of the decurrent lamina, strongly dilated at the base ; lamina coriaceous, glabrous, narrowly elliptic-obovate to obovate, 12 to 16 cm long, 5.5 to 8 cm wide, the base acuminately long-decurrent, the margins revolute, the apex forming an obtuse acumen about 5 mm long; costa projecting slightly from the upper surface, 3 to 4 mm wide, with slender longitudinal ribs on both surfaces, usually only the latter projecting beneath; pairs of veins 22 to 28, rather straight except toward the apex, the connecting veins ob- seure but often fairly evident, one or two intervening veins often visible. Mindanao, Moro Province, Dapitan, Father Antonio Obach, S. J. This re- markable mango, communicated by Father F. Sanchez, of the Ateneo de Manila, seems singularly distinct in its verticillate leaves, but finds its closest alliance in M. caesia Jack and M. superba Hook. f. Through Father Sanchez’ courtesy, 1 am enabled to quote the following, taken from an account of a trip of his own, near Dapitan, in February, 1892, ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 339 “Andando un corto trecho divisamos una segunda colina, en el mismo lado del estero que la anterior y de menor elevacién, que llaman Tapucan; en ella nos llamo la atencién un frbol de hermosa y ancha copa, Ilamado bauno ; que es suma- mente venenoso: de él afirma el P. Obach que en cierta ocasién subieron dos muchachos del pueblo 4 dicho frbol para recoger su fruta, que es comestible, y uno de ellos por haberse hecho un rasguiio insignificante en el brazo al trepar por él, qued6é tan envenenado al solo contacto de la herida con la corteza, que muri6é al poco tiempo; el otro lego 4 estar de gravedad y al fin con gran trabajo salid con bien del apuro. Dicen los conocedores del pafs: que es cosa ya probada, que al cobijarse uno debajo de su sombra al llover 6 en tiempo htimedo, le produce hinchazones; y si la cae 4 uno agua impregnada del jugo de sus hojas causa ampollas ¢ hinchazones® las cuales dan fiebres y dolores agudos; y por poco que se descuiden en tomar su contraveneno de asta de venado carbonizada, pepita de San Ignacio etc. mueren irremisiblemente. Arbol verdaderamente traidor, ya porque sus frutas son regaladas y comestibles, ya también porque lo sombrio y espeso de su copa convida 4 descansar debajo de él: pero jay! del que incautamente alli reposa, atin por breve tiempo, pues paga muy cara la sombra y el descanso, ya que no le cueste la vida 6 graves dolores.” * A drawing of the fruits represents them as nearly oval, and narrowed near the base, about 16 cm long, 10 cm wide; they are said to have a bluish tinge, with white mesocarp, and an oblanceolate seed 9 to 10 em long. Local name: bawno. ONCOCARPUS A. Gray. The collections upon which this genus was based, were made in the Fiji Islands by the Wilkes Exploring Expedition. Pistillate flowers were obtained, but lost, and their description was taken from a sketch, drawn from memory.” ‘The genus was retained by Bentham and Hooker, but reduced to'synonymy under Semecarpus by Engler.** Examination of the pistillate flowers of certain Philippine collections, which had been identified provisionally as Semecarpus, showed a structure in the ovary and styles very distinct from that of that genus, resembling rather that of Melanochyla. It was at first supposed that a new genus was represented, but there is now little reason to doubt that these collections should be placed in Oncocarpus. The fact is undeniable that the nature of the styles is not as drawn by the members of the Wilkes Expedition ; while it is on this point as evidenced by Philippine collections that ‘the present claim for the validity of Gray’s genus is largely based. Fruit of Philippine collections has been compared at the Gray herbarium with the type of Oncocarpus vitiensis by Professor M. L. Fernald, who found that there was every external appearance of similarity. It has not been possible to obtain pistillate flowers of the species of Fiji, but I am indebted to Mr. E. G. Baker, of the British Museum of Natural History, for the privilege of examining one of its fruits, collected by Seemann. Cartas de los Misioneros de la Compafifa de Jestis en Filipinas 10 (1895) 476, 447. 7 Bot. U. 8. Expl. Exped. (1854) 364-366, pl. 43. * DC, Monogr. Phan. 4 (1883) 473, 483. 340 ROBINSON. The resemblance is so great that there can hardly be a doubt of the generic identity of the Fijian and Philippine collections, although this involves the assumption that the ovary of the former has been wrongly described. In the Philippine collections, the style is apical, entire at its base, but soon divides into 3 branches. This is usually evident both in flower and fruit, but sometimes in the latter the ridge overlying the ovule is sufficiently elevated to obscure the short basal portion of the style, and the lobes may seem to be separate styles. The ovary at anthesis already shows traces of invagination in its walls. In fruit, a cross-section shows sometimes a single cell with the lateral, apical, or basal walls more or less invaginated, or other fruits from the same plant may show these invaginations more or less constricted, sometimes reaching the center, sometimes not, so that at some levels they appear to divide the ovary into cells, as many as 14 having been counted. Sometimes these false cells are not developed at the apex leaving a considerable cavity in which the ovule is found> When there are several false cells, the outer surface of the fruit, always forming ridges, has one of these narrower than the others. This narrower ridge corresponds to a similar cavity, in which the ovule can always be found. In some cases this ovule extends to other false cells, but the ovary is always l-ovuled. I have called these ovules rather than seeds, as they have never been found in our material in developed condition. This may not unlikely be due to the copious resinous secretion, described by the collectors as brown or black, or by one as milk and rapidly becoming a deep-black and strongly staining. No indication has been found that the above-described nature of the ovary is due to insect attack. There are two Philippine species referable to the genus, easily distinguished from one another by the very different size of the leaves, by their shape, pubescence, and somewhat by their venation. I. Oncocarpus macrophylla (Merr.) comb. nov. ¥ Semecarpus macrophylla Merr. in Bull. For. Bur. (Philip) 1 (1903) 33. Mrinpanao, Province of Surigao, Surigao, Ahern 348, 529. The style is simple at its base, often persistent, 3-lobed, and longer than in the following species. Local name: pipi. : 2. Oncocarpus ferruginea sp. nov. Semecarpus micrantha? Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 1 (1906) Suppl. 85, nom Perk. Fragm. Fl. Philip. (1904) 27. Arbor: foliis petiolatis, oblanceolatis, elliptico-oblanceolatis, oblongo- oblanceolatis, vel ovalibus, basi cuneatis decurrentibusque, apice breviter obtuse acuminatis; venis utrinque 10 ad 15, secundariis valde reticulatis. Flowers polygamo-dioecious, in terminal or rarely lateral densely fer- ruginous-tomentose panicles, 10 to 15 cm long, the pedicels at anthesis usually very short, bearing 3 bracts of variable outline from lanceolate to suborbicular and 2 to 3 mm long: calyx of pistillate flowers densely ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 341 pubescent, 3 mm long, the tube hemispheric, the 5 lobes not exceeding 0.5 mm in length, rounded; petals 5, inserted on the margin of the narrow annular disk, coriaceous, glabrous on the inner surface, hooded, valvate, 2 to 3.5 mm long; stamens 5, always more or less concealed by the dense pubescence of the ovary, the glabrous filaments wider at the base, anther-cells 2, diverging at the base, together ovate, cordate; ovary hemispheric, 2 mm in diameter at the base; style simple for about 0.3 mm, then forming 3 arms about 1 mm long, these having at their apices two very short divergent lobes: fruiting pedicels elongated, the calyx now 6 to 12 mm long, surrounding the swollen hypocarp and usually with grooves corresponding to those of the drupe, calyx-lobes persistent, not enlarged ; petals occasionally persistent, little or not elongated ; drupe densely ferruginous-pubescent or somewhat glabrescent, obovoid in out- line, 15 to 20 mm long, 20 to 25 mm wide at the apex, which is truncate along the margin and depressed in the middle, several ridges extending from base to apex of the drupe, commonly the narrowest of these con- tinued to the persistent base of the style, to which portions of the style-arms sometimes remain attached. A tree, 10 to 15 m high, its trunk 12 to 22.5 em in diameter, the more or less angled branchlets covered with gray or blackish striate bark, the younger shoots ferruginous-pubescent or glabrescent with age: leaves alternate, simple, the petioles 1 to 2.5 cm long the lamina subcoriaceous or coriaceous, oblanceolate, elliptic-oblanceolate, oblong-oblanceolate, or oval, 7.5 to 22 cm long, 3.5 to 8.5 cm wide, the base cuneate and decur- rent on the petiole, the margins entire or somewhat wavy, the apex abruptly contracted into an acumen 5 to 12 mm long; lateral veins on each side of the midrib 10 to 15, forming a distant submarginal vein, the secondary veins leaving the primary at about a right angle, all these and the finer reticulations conspicuous; both surfaces glabrous, the under when dry somewhat brownish or paler than the shining olivaceous or bluish-green upper surface. : Luzon, Province of Pampanga, Mount Arayat, For. Bur. 17669 Curran: Province of Rizal, Bosoboso, For. Bur. 3173 (type), 2138, 3363 Ahern’s collector, Merrill 2654, Bur, Sci. 1507 Ramos; Antipolo, Merr. Dec. Phil. For. Fl. 15 Ahern’s collector: Province of Bataan, Mount Mariveles, Ahern 746, Williams 580, For. Bur. 2388 Borden, For. Bur, 2422 Meyer: Province of Tayabas, Pagbilao, For. Bur. 10748 Curran. A collection in fruit from Cabadbaran, Butuan Subprovince, Mindanao, is also probably referable to 0. ferruginea. The fruits are less pubescent, and the calyx is not persistent, the extreme apex of the fruit forms the usual cone within a depression, and shows traces of the styles, usually slightly separated. A section of the fruit shows 9 invaginations, the seed, attached beneath the narrow ridge already described, is better developed than in any of the Luzon material examined, spreading in superficial resemblance to a walnut into each of the cavities. Flowering material will be necessary to a decision whether or not this should be positively referred to 0. ferruginea. Local names: ligayao, ligaas. 342 ROBINSON. RHAMNACEAE. RHAMNUS L. Rhamnus philippinensis sp. nov. Rhamnus formosana C. B. Rob. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 3 (1908) Bot. 201, non Matsum. in Bot. Mag. Tokyo 12 (1898) 22. Frutex, R. formosanae similis, sed differt calyce fructifero truncato, floribus majoribus, foliis crassioribus, latioribus, crenatis, et venis mino- ribus. Flowers polygamous, forming axillary or terminal few-flowered leafy cymes, borne on pedicels 1.8 to 3.5 mm long; bracteoles linear, acute, 1.5 mm long: calyx campanulate, 2.2 to 2.8 mm long, divided for over half its length into 5 broadly lanceolate to broadly ovate obtusely acuminate lobes, slightly pilose on the back, the inner surface of the lobes keeled ; petals 5, inserted on the rim of the calyx-tube, elliptic, oblong, or oval, about 0.6 mm long, rounded at the apex, narrowed and with short claws at the base; stamens 5 or none, when present inserted with the petals and opposite them, filaments 0.2 mm long, anthers 0.3 to 0.4 mm long ; disk lining the tube of the calyx; ovary sessile, subglobose, 0.8 mm long, 1 mm in diameter, 3-celled; styles 2- or 3-cleft, nearly 1 mm long: fruiting calyx truncate at the apex, slightly cupular or flattened, when viewed from below or above very obtusely 5-angled, less than 4 mm in diameter ; fruit purple, globose or subglobose, up to 8 mm in diameter, when mature (and dried), strongly 3-grooved with 3 shallower interven- ing grooves; nutlets usually 2, more rarely 1 or 3, 6.5 to 7.5 mm long, 4.5 mm wide, 1-celled, 1-seeded ; seeds about 6.5 mm long, testa brownish. A shrub 2.5 to 3 m high, the bark of the ultimate branches light- brown to dark-brown, striate, with numerous somewhat conspicuous lenticels, shortly pilose on the branches, branchlets, petioles, veins of the under surface of the leaves, stipules, and branches of the inflorescence: leaves subopposite or well alternate, the petioles 6 to 20 mm long, the lamina rigidly chartaceous, oval or suborbicular, rarely oblong, often of two fairly definite types on the same plant, the one usually 9 to 10 cm long, 5 to 6.5 em wide, the other 3.5 to 5.5 cm long, 2.5 to 4 cm wide, but some of either type larger or smaller than the figures given, truncate or subcordate at the base, crenate on the margins, somewhat abruptly acuminate and mucronate at the apex; pinnately veined, with 4 to 6 pairs on each side, well arched ; stipules linear-lanceolate, acute, caducous, 2.5 mm long. Luzon, with no further locality, Loher 331: Subprovince of Bontoc, Gaddac, Vanoverbergh 732; Bauco, Bur. Sci. 7005 Ramos: Subprovince of Benguet, Baguio, Elmer 6379, Merrill 7701, Williams 1121 (type), For. Bur. 4873 Curran: Proy- ince of Nueva Vizcaya or Pangasinan, Imogen-Nozo trail, For, Bur. 15847 Merritt: Province of Rizal, Montalban, Loher 5822: Province of Tayabas, Mount Banajao. Whitford s, n. ALABASTRA. PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 343 With 4 sheets from Formosa for comparison, including two of the type collec- tion, Henry 1172, very constantly. agreeing with one another, and the above cited Philippine specimens, differing regularly from them in various characters, I feel convinced that two distinct species are concerned. The-best character is that of the fruiting calyx, but even by the leaves there is no difficulty in separating the two series. The flowers of the Philippine species are also larger, and those on the Formosan plants are apparently mature. Rhamnus pulogensis Merr., the other Philippine species of the genus, is very different. MALVACEAE. GOSSYPIUM Linn. Gossypium paniculatum Blanco FI. Filip. (1837) 539; ed. 2 (1845) 378. Blanco’s description may be translated thus. Stem round. Leaves alternate, soft, villose, slightly heart-shaped, with 3 sharp lobes, the older leaves with 2 other smaller lobes or also with 3 additional teeth on each side, with 7 nerves, and a small gland on the lower surface of the costa. Petioles long, with 2 awl-shaped stipules at the base. Flowers lateral and inclined to one side, in a kind of simple few-flowered panicle. Pedicel shorter than the flower. Calyx double, the outer of 3 heart-shaped parts, each with a gland at the base and 10 or 11 long sharp teeth. Interior calyx smaller with 5 sharp lobes. Corolla campanulate, red or white, of 5 parts, larger than the outer calyx. Stamens many on a column. Stigmas 3 or 4. Capsule oval, sharp, 4-celled. Seeds enveloped and strongly fastened together by the cotton. Height a little more or less than a vara (836 mm). Known and used in Ilocos, equal in quality to that of Batangas; nevertheless, the latter appears to be the stronger, with more lustre and body, and yet to attain the whiter color. From this cotton the flocano women make cloth of exquisite fineness and appearance. It is distin- guished from that of Fernambuco (G. brasiliense Macfad.) by the inflorescence and other points .... Flowers in January. Local name (Ilocano): capas. In order to ascertain the identity of Ilocos cotton, Mr. W. K. Weaver, of Vigan, Ilocos Sur, has obtained four plants from that place for our collections. The first question is whether they represent Blanco’s species, and there are difficulties. The bracteoles have 8 to 10 teeth, usually 9, the flowers are not in panicles, the capsules are 3-celled. The last does not entirely contradict Blanco, as he says that the stigmas are 3 or 4. In other respects, the agreement is quite sufficient, the only other discrepancy being with the leaf-glands, which vary on the specimens. All things considered, it is highly probable that these can be identified as @. paniculatum Blanco. : Following more modern systems of classification, the siltence proves to be with @. nanking Meyen. There is a complete fuzz, the floss is white, the bracteoles are united at the base but only moderately, 2 to 3.5 mm out of a total length of 3 cm; the leaves are definitely or slightly cordate, their lobes are 3 or on older leaves 5, not constricted at their bases, dividing the lamina for half its length, or more often less. Two of the plants were noted as white-flowered, a third as red-flowered, while the upper flowers of the fourth were white and the lower , But they do not agree well with any of the varieties of G. nanking enumerated by Watt,” differing from all of them in the bracteoles, probagly approaching nearest to var. rubicunda. Blanco’s species was apparently overlooked by Watt. If the bracteoles be considered insufficiently united for the section of the genus, ” The Wild and Cultivated Cotton Plants of the World (1907) 78, 79, 114-139. 344 ROBINSON. it would come nearest to G. punctatum Sch. & Thon., to which it has much resem- blance. On the assumption, apparently warranted, that it is the original cotton used in Ilocos, geography and history aid in its separation from that species, as it is known that cotton was cultivated in that province before the coming of Europeans. This by no means implies that it is native to the Philippines; the presumption is rather that it was introduced from the western Malay Islands at an early date. There are many records of the cultivation of cotton in the Philippines, some of these dating back to the coming of the Spaniards, in 1521. Where definite localities are assigned, these are more often Ilocos, but not always. Briefly its history is that the Spaniards found a considerable industry here; that it decayed, at least so far as manufacture was concerned, owing to the importation of dearer and poorer Chinese and Indian materials; that the interruption in commerce at the end of the 18th century, due to the wars with Great Britain, led to its revival; that it has since continued as a minor industry. The following are a few of the more important references in Blair and Robertson’s “The Philippine Islands.” Probably 1586. “Ylocos . . . . is a land abounding in rice and cotton.”” At this time, cotton was exported from Manila.” About 1620. “The canvas from which the sails are made in the said islands is excellent, and much better than what is shipped from Espafia, because it is made from cotton. They are certain cloths, which are called mantas from the Province of Ylocos, for the natives of that province manufacture nothing else, and pay your Majesty their tribute in them. They are one tercia wide, and as thick as canvas. They are doubled, and quilted with thread of the same cotton. They last much longer than those of Espafia.” ” a 1629. (The Igorots) “take away blankets which the people in Ilocos make of excellent quality, from cotton, which is produced in abundance.”* This applies equally to the present day. In a very long description of the decay of the trade, the cause assigned is that the money obtained by the Filipinos from the Spaniards left the former in such a state of comparative affluence that they abandoned severer toil, and were content to purchase from the Chinese and others cloth and similar products, which could much better have been made in the Islands and at lower prices. It was even proposed to prohibit such imports entirely. “The Armenians of India and the Chinese had likewise the control, from the time of the conquest of the islands, of importing into them annually the enormous quantities of small cotton articles (pafiuelos) and ordinary cambayas which the natives of the country consume, until intercourse with those coasts was interrupted in the late war with Inglaterra. Then necessity and the high price of those goods induced the natives of Filipinas to manufacture them, and in such abund- ance that the ships which arrived at Manila, after the peace, with those com- modities suffered great loss; and from that time the importation of those fabrics ceased, and the natives continued to manufacture them in the country. This has not been the case, however, with the fine cambayas and kerchifs from Madrast, nor with the cotton fabricas from China;” the causes assigned being the superiority of Indian dyes, and the great population and large crops of China, leading to low @rices.* #34 988: «6: * 23: 279, 280. TS 36s ‘ 48: 78-05. . ws RED vd. 2 * 61; .253,:254. ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 345 Part of Buzeta’s note* is also given. “Los indios conocfan antes de la con- quista el algodon, pero ignoraban el uso que podian hacer de sus prodigiosos capullos: dos clases de plantas lo producen; unas son tan crecidas como grandes perales, pero el algodon que dan estos Arboles, es basto y solo se emplea para almo- hadas, colchoncillos, y para fabricar mantas, lonas para velas de buques y alguno que otro tejido ordinario. La otra clase de algodén es la que se cultiva yes mucho més pequefia que la primera. .... crece hasta la altura de tres pies.” Under G. arboreum Linn., Sir George Watt” has cited a plate in the Sloane herbarium, 165: fig. 212, as from Camel’s collection. This would imply Philip- pine origin, and a date at the end of the 17th or the beginning of the 18th century. Doctor A. B. Rendle and Mr. Edmund Baker, of the British Museum of Natural History, have examined the plate, and find nothing to justify the opinion that it was in any way connected with Camel. The latter has a brief reference to cotton. “Gossipiwm, seu Xylumyalndis Bulac. Herbaceum & Arbo- reum,” followed by a short statement of its medicinal properties.” THYMELAEACEAE. PIMELEA Banks & Solander. Pimelea philippinensis sp. nov. Suffrutex: inflorescentiis, superioribus exceptis, longiter pedunculatis, bracteis 4 basin versus coalitis involucratis; floribus circiter 20, breviter pedicellatis; receptaculo anguste tubuloso, supra ovarium post anthesin circumscisso-deciduo; sepalis 4, imbricatis, ovatis, obtusis, parvis; petalis nullis; staminibus 2, filamentis brevissimis, sepalis exterioribus opposi- tis; ovario uniloculare, uniovulato: foliis oppositis vel alternis, sub- sessilibus, oblanceolatis vel oblongo-oblanceolatis. Inflorescences simulating flowers, borne on peduncles of various lengths up to 5 cm, or the uppermost nearly sessile; bracts 4, over 1 cm long, free for about two-thirds of the distance to the base, thence forming a cup containing about 20 flowers, the lobes lanceolate, subacute; the flowers not maturing simultaneously, borne on pedicels about 1 mm long: receptacle white, at anthesis, forming a slender tube 8 mm long and somewhat dilated at the apex, the portion above the ovary falling after anthesis; sepals 4, imbricate, ovate, obtuse, about 0.7 mm long; petals none; stamens 2, the filaments not exceeding 0.5 mm, borne at the base of the outer sepals at the throat of the receptacle; anthers 0.4 mm long, 2-celled ; ovary about 1.5 mm long, 1-celled, with one pendulous anatropous ovule; style 5 mm long, the subcapitate stigma opposite the anthers; seeds about 2 mm long, the black testa crustaceous, embryo straight,’ the fleshy cotyledons about 1 mm long the radicle 0.4 mm long, albumen none. Probably an annual, suffrutescent, glabrous throughout, 20 to 30 cm high, branched : leaves opposite or alternate, petioles wanting or less {han * Dice, Islas Filip. 1 (1850) 203, 204. 71. c, 84. : Ray Hist. Pl. 3: (1704) App. 80. 346 ROBINSON. 1 mm long, lamina ‘membranaceous, oblanceolate or oblong-oblanceolate, 12 to 26 mm long, 2 to 7.5 mm wide, the base acute or obtuse, the margins entire, the apex blunt; venation obscure, except somewhat the costa. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, Sanchez Mira, Bur. Sci. 7410 Ramos. The genus contains from 70 to 80 species, all from Australia, Tasmania, or New Zealand, with the exception of the Philippine plant and P. brevituba Fawe., of Timor, which is its closest ally, the latter having longer sepals and stamens. They are referable to the section Thecanthes, but are somewhat intermediate between it and Calyptrostegia, having the united involucral bracts of the former, but the receptacle circumscissile as in the latter. The locality of this exile is at the extreme north of Luzon, the elevation was not noted by the collector, but according to his recollection, it grew in light forest or jungle, at less than 100 m elevation. 9 ELAEAGNACEAR. ELAEAGNUS Linn. Elaeagnus philippensis Perr. in Mém. Soc. Linn. Paris 3 (1824) 114. Hlaeagnus perrottetii Schlecht. in DC. Prodr. 14 (1857) 613. Elaeagnus cumingii Schlecht. 1: c. Elaeagnus alingara Schlecht. 1. ¢. 615. Elacagnus angustifolia Blanco FI. Filip. (1837) 74, non Linn. Sp. PI. (1753) 121. Elacagnus latifolia Auct., quoad Philip., non Linn. 1. e. : Realization of the fact, which should never have escaped my attention, that Perrottet had collected plants of this genus in the Philippines, has caused me to reéxamine his description of EB. philippensis, which I had stated showed his plant to be a Capparis.” There is room for doubt that my statement was wrong, for while some of the less important characters do point to a Capparis common near Manila, all the more essential facts are otherwise. The Philippine species of Blaeagnus, exhibits considerable variation, but none of the differences are of sufficient importance to warrant segregation. It ranges from the extreme north of Luzon, to Mindanao, but is represented by comparatively few collections. Per- rottet’s name, which has been neglected, is much the oldest, and should be used. MYRTACEAE. DECASPERMUM Forst. Decaspermum fructicosum Forst. Char. Gen. (1776) 74. This, as represented by Vaupel 291, from Samoa, has much similarity to both Philippine species. The nearer alliance is with D. blancoi Vidal, but the leaves of the latter are distinctly less acuminate. In this respect, the closer resemblance is to D. paniculatum Kurz, but the flowers of D. fruticosum are larger, and the inflorescence less branched than is usual in D. paniculatum. : : EUGENIA Linn. ‘i Eugenia balerensis nom. nov. Eugenia brunnea C. B. Rob. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 4 (1909) Bot. 372, non (Berg) Niedenzu in Engl. & Prantl Nat. Pflanzenfam. 3" (1893) 81. & new name would seem to be required for the above, but the original will again become valid under the Vienna Code if some future monographer should consider the original E. brunnea to be untenable. , ‘ * This Journal 3 (1908) Bot. 305. ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 347 Eugenia brevistylis sp. nov. § Syzygium. Arbor glabra: inflorescentiis terminalibus vel in axillis superioribus, late paniculato-cymosis; floribus parvis, campanulatis; calyce truncato vel subtruncato; petalis saepius liberis; staminibus stylisque brevibus: foliis longiuscule petiolatis, coriaceis, ellipticis, oblongis, vel ovalibus, basi acutis, apice acuminatis, venis confertis. Inflorescences paniculate-cymose, terminal and sessile or peduncled in the upper leaf-axils, 5 to 12 cm long, 5 to 12 cm wide, the lower branches 4-angled, the lower usually 2 to 2.5 em long to the first fork, the flowers usually in threes on the ultimate. branches and when go sessile or subses- sile, when solitary with pedicels 2 to 5 mm long ; bracteoles ovate, paired, very short; flowers when very small salver-shaped, at anthesis campanu- late; calyx 3 to 4 mm long, the margin truncate or with 4 or even more very short and obscure lobes; petals 4, irregular in shape, ovate, obovate, or oblong in a single flower, 1 to 1.5 mm long, free or somewhat united, rarely extending beyond the outline of the calyx; disk comparatively thick but nowhere free from the calyx; stamens about 20, the filaments stout, 0.8 mm long or less, the anthers about 0.3 mm long; styles rarely exserted, less than 1 mm long; ovary 2-celled. Trees about 15 m high, the trunks 30 to 45 cm in diameter, the bark of the branchlets light-gray ; branchlets and branches terete: petioles 10 to. 14 cm long; lamina coriaceous, elliptic, oval, or oblong, 5 to 7.5 em long: 24 to 42 mm wide, the base acutely acuminate and decurrent, the apex contracted into an obtuse acumen 5 to 15 mm long; veins crowded with little distinction between primary and secondary and inter-reticulat- ing, the former from 25 to 40 in number, terminating in a definite if slender vein less than 1 mm from the margin in narrower leaves, nearly 2 mm from the margin in the widest, the upper surface shining, the under duller. : Mrinpanao, District of Zamboanga, Subanginagayas, For. Bur. 12459 Tarrosa (type). To this also almost certainly belong two other collections from the same district, For. Bur. 9192, Whitford & Hutchinson, from Port Banga, and For. Bur, 15228 Klemme, from Limaong, but there are curious differences. For. Bur. 9192 has the calyx divided midway in its length, and the upper and lower halves are each swollen into a number (usually 8) of nearly globose lobes. The same condition is also found on some of the flowers of For. Bur. 15228, but in addition there are quite typical Syzygium fruits, nearly globose, 6 to 8 mm in diameter, the calyx-rim almost truncate but on very careful examination showing very short lobes, not at all swollen. It seems, therefore, that the lobed fruits above described are merely pathologic states, as there is no other reason why these collections should not be identified with Z. brevistylis. The type has another unsatisfactory feature from the point of view of the describer, Small-sized flowers have often: already lost their petals and stamens, much larger ones still possess them; the diagnosis was drawn from the latter. The closest alliance of Bp. brevistylis seems to be Syzygium campanellum Miq., supposedly of Java, but the stems are — and of different color, and the petioles are longer.’ The closest Philippine alliance 105264——_3 348 ROBINSON. is with FE. perpallida Merr., which has smaller and more acuminate leaves, the inflorescence usually shorter, and the anthers more numerous. An almost equally natural and even greater superficial resemblance is to HE. grisea C. B. Rob., so much so that three collections previously referred to the latter should be included in EB. brevistylis. These are Ahern 429, Tinago Island; Ahern 448, Dinagat; and Ahern 516, Surigao. The species appear sufficiently distinct in the less crowded flowers, fewer and shorter stamens, and shorter styles of H. brevistylis ; its petioles are often longer and more slender, but there is little vegetative dif- ference. : ~ Local names: canomay (Tinago); lagi-lagi (Dinagat, Surigao); malaruhat (Zamboanga). Eugenia calleryana sp. nov. § Syzygium. Arbor glabra: inflorescentiis terminalibus, saepius sessilibus, corym- boso-paniculatis ; floribus albis, sessilibus vel subsessilibus; alabastris tur- binatis; calyce truncato, corolla calyptrata sed petalis 4 separabilibus composita: foliis chartaceis, ellipticis vel anguste ellipticis, mediocribus, basi acutis decurrentibusque, apice acuminatis; venis utrinque 11 ad 15. Inflorescences terminal, sessile or by abortion of their lowest. branches or of the uppermost leaves peduncled (the terminal stem-internode usually about 4 cm long), corymbose-paniculate, 2.5 to 6 em long, 3.5 to 9 em wide, trifurcate at the base and at usually 2 or rarely 3 succeed- ing nodes, the basal lateral branches usually about 15 mm long to the “next fork, the second pair of lateral branches about 8 mm long, the basal internode of the central branch 1 cm long, or all these proportionally longer in the largest panicles; the branches forked like the panicle itself, the basal secondary branches 7 to 10 mm long, these and the upper branches again trifurcate, the lower basal tertiary branches about 2 to 5 mm long, 1-flowered, the central tertiary branch of similar length, 3-flowered, the flowers sessile or subsessile ; bracteoles present but minute: buds just before anthesis turbinate, about 7.5 mm long, including a pseudostalk about 2.5 mm long, 4.5 mm wide below the apex, 4 mm wide at the apex of the calyx; calyx margin truncate or most obscurely with 4 very short and very broadly rounded lobes; corolla calyptrate but easily separable into 4 petals of irregular size and shape, from 2 mm long and 4 mm wide to 1.8 mm long and 2.5 mm wide in the same flower; disk not thick; stamens numerous, about 80, in fully matured flowers averag- ing about 15 mm in length, anthers about 0.5 mm long; style up to 15 mm long; ovary 2-celled, thick-walled, with rather numerous ovules. Trees, 8 to 10 m high, the trunk 12 cm in diameter, the bark of the ‘branchlets gray-cinnamon, terete, the ultimate branchlets often compres- sed: petioles 7 to 10 mm long; lamina thinly chartaceous, elliptic or narrowly elliptic, 12 to 19 cm long, 3.5 to 7 cm wide, the base acute and decurrent, the apex forming an obtuse acumen usually 6 to 10 mm long, upper surface green, shining, under surface paler-green ; pairs of lateral veins 11 to 15, with very definite lateral veins usually formed by the ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 349 third basal pair about 4 mm within the margin, fainter lateral veins formed by the second basal vein for nearly the length of the lamina and by the basal vein for a shorter distance, cross-veins and finer venation also well evident on both surfaces. Luzon, Subprovince of Benguet, Sablan, Bur. Sci. 13544 Fénia, in flower, Nov. 28, 1910. This has its nearest Philippine ally in BE. brittoniana ©. B. Rob., from which it is distinguished by its larger and thinner leaves, of different shape and venation. Among outside species, the nearest alliance seems to be with FB. vale- toniana King, which has coriaceous leaves of different color, with more numerous nerves. The species is named for the supposed first botanical collector in the mountainous parts of northern Luzon. Eugenia clementis ©. B. Rob. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 4 (1909) Bot. 383. Comparison of the material upon which this species was based, now sup- plemented by. For. Bur. 16456 Pray, also from Lake Lanao, Mindanao, with Eugenia lanceolata Lam., as repressented by C. P. 2863, from Ceylon, shows that the two species are very closely allied. The leaves of the type of £. ele- mentis, Mrs. Clemens 1036, have the veins much more crowde nd more evident than the Ceylon plant, but on Mrs, Clemens 1113, which in f other differ- ences I am disposed to consider specifically the same, the veins} are less numerous and more widely separated, rather closely approaching those « f the latter. In this. respect, Pray’s collection agrees with Mrs. Clemens 1036. Eugenia lanceo- late Lam. is considered to be the same as E. wightiana Wight, but the venation of the latter, as shown by Wight’s plate, is much more open than that of typical E. clementis. Moreover, it shows no submarginal vein, although this is present on ©. P, 2863 in practically exact agreement with Mrs. Clemens 1113, whereas in Mrs. Clemens 1036 and For. Bur. 16456 the vein is almost at the extreme margin. Reéxamination of the flowers of the type of HZ. clementis shows that the petals are often more than 4, although I have not succeeded in finding ' more than 6. Ordinarily, the outermost is the largest, forming a calyptra, and the others are more or less united with one another but separate from the outer, the result being that it is rather difficult to determine just how many petals are represented. Eugenia corymbifera Koord. & Val. in Meded. Lands Plant. 40 (1900) 99. Luzon, Province of Nueva Vizcaya, For. Bur. 10882 Curran: Province of Zambales, Mount Pinatubo, Loher 6040: Province of Bataan, Limay, For. Bur. ‘ 19149 Curran; Duale, For. Bur. 20055 Topacio. From Koorders and Valeton’s description, taken in conjunction with two sheets form the Botanical Gardens at Buitenzorg, V, C. 59 and V, B, 25, the above identification seems quite positive. The second and third of the above collections are between flower and fruit, and have distinctly stouter inflorescence-branches than the Javan, but the remaining Bataan plant is in early bud, they are then more slender than in the latter. In general, the leaves of the Philippine plants are slightly different in shape, rather elliptic or elliptic-lanceolate than oblong- lanceolate, but so are some on the Javan specimens. The venation is the same, but more conspicuous on the Philippine leaves; morever their petioles are rather stouter. However, these are quite insufficient characters upon which to separate the series of the two regions. Of the six collections above cited, V, B, 25, is at least. superficially, the most distinct. Ic. Pl: pl. 529. 350, : ROBINSON. - Eugenia lacustris C. B. Rob. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 4..(1909) -Bot..377. | _ This is not_the oldest use of this name, as in Chodat and Hassler’s Plantae Hassleriande," it is applied to two different species. While it would not have been given to the Philippine plant, had the facts been known in time, there seems no sufficient reason for displacing it, as in both ‘of the’ Paraguayan cases, it can not .be-considered more than a nomen subnudum. Both have localities and collection ‘numbers assigned, beyond this the first has only “Frutex 4-6 m. petala persicina,” and the second “Frutex 2-3 m. petala alba.” In the Plantae Hasslerianae, some ten. species: of eeaena are indicated as new under. names previously employed. : Eugenia lutea sp. nov. § Jambosa. Arbor, Eugeniae jambos Linn. affinis: ’ inflorescentiis corymbos0-pani- culatis, divaricatis; floribus luteis, tetrameris, longe pedicellatis; calycis lobis conspicuis, persistentibus, petalis liberis, disco bene evoluto: foliis petiolatis, coriaceis, elliptico-lanceolatis vel oblongo-lanceolatis basi acutis decurrentibusque, venis utrinque 5 ad 9. Inflorescence terminal, corymbose-paniculate, 12: to 15 cm ioe 11 to 12 em wide e apex, trichotomous or some of the branches aborting, 9- to 12-floweréd; the peduncle 2.5 to 3.5 em long, the ultimate pedicels 16 to 30 mm long, 1-flowered ; buds just before anthesis yellow, ‘turbinate, 2 em long, 1.5 em long to the base of the calyx-lobes and there 1.2 cm wide; calyx-lobes 4, overlapping at the base, the outer pair 4 to 4,5 mm. long, 10 mm wide, the inner pair 7.5 mm long, 15 mm wide, all’ broadly rounded at the apex ; petals 4, free, 10 to 15 mm long, 15 to 16 mm wide; disk well developed, circular in outline ; filaments numerous; style (in fruit) up ‘to at-least 4 em long: fruit urceolate, excluding the ealyxlobes, these persistent, suberect or spreading, incurved, coriaceous, their bane cashes 1 cm above the insertion of the styles. A tree, about 20 m high, with a trunk 40 ¢m in diaislene the ‘ditimate branches terete, with pale-cinnamon or yellowish bark; petioles 1 to 2 em long, lamina coriaéeous, elliptic-lanceolaté or oblong-lanceolate, 13° to 20 cm long, 3 to 8 cm wide, the bases acute and decurrent, the apices probably shortly acuminate, both surfaces brownish or olivaceous, but the “upper more shining; primary lateral veins on each side of the midrib 5 to 9, projecting moderately from the lower surface, nearly level with the-upper, the midrib impressed on the upper and distinetly - projecting from the lower surface, the veins in the basal half or two-thirds not uniting except by minor anastomoses and therefore not forming a. definite abner vein. : Luzon, Province of Tayabas, Quinatacutan, ‘on rocky river-banks ‘at’'100 m elevation, Bur. Sci. 45201 Fowworthy ty] é Ramee _ (type) ; pete yemcreie wi or. nia 18635 Darling. Eugenia lutea seems to find its nearest ally among species of eneésaitionen distribution in EB. jambos Linn., but more neatly approaches others’ ‘supposed to * Bull. Herb. Boiss. II 7 (1907) 806, 807. ALABASTRA. PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 351 be endemic in these Islands. It may be distinguished from J. squamifera by its longer petioles, more acute leaf-bases, wider-branching inflorescence, and the color of the flowers; from 2. wanthophylla by the longer petioles, more coriaceous and usually larger leaves, wider-branching inflorescence, and the color of the flowers; from H. sulcistyla by the wider and different inflorescence, differently shaped buds, and the somewhat longer petioles. The wood is utilized commercially. Local names: macaasin, malayambo. { ‘ LEPTOSPERMUM J. R. & G. Forst.” When originally published, this genus contained 7 species, L. scandens, L. collinum, L. ciliatum, L. perforatum, L. leucadendron, L. scoparium, and L. virgatum, the first five forming a section Callistémones, the remaining two ‘a section unnamed. The first four are to-day placed in the genus Metrosideros Banks ex Gaertn. The fifth species was based on Melal l dendra Linn., although as the Kew Index states it to be equivalent to L. flavescens and L, pubescens, there may have been a mixture of herbarium material, of which a wrong identification had been made. Only the sixth is now considered to be a Leptospermum, the seventh being a Baeckea. What the Forsters intended in founding this genus is open to conjecture, as they presumably considered all of their seven species to be congeneric, and yet they included amongst them Melaleuca leucadendra Linn., the only species placed by Linnaeus in Melaleuca,* no other having been published therein during the intervening nine years. Apparently, Leptospermum was brought forward as a substitute name for Melaleuca, and color is given to this view by the fact that the younger Forster subsequently transferred all seven species to the latter. If this view be rejected, the type of Leptospermum. would seem to be L. scandens, which is both the first species described and the first figured; L. scoparium, which alone belongs to the genus as at present interpreted, being the sixth described and the second figured. On this view, Leptospermum would become a synonym of, or rather an older name for Metrosideros. The Brussels Congress is believed here to have ruled in favor of the latter over Nani Adans.,” a still older name, but there is still no international legislation to cover such cases as that of Leptospermum, or even the still worse ones, where additions and subtractions have left a genus without any of the species ascribed to it by its original author. : MELASTOMATACEAE. MEDINILLA Gaudich. Medinilla disparifolia sp. nov. Scandens, ramis teretibus, ultimis hirsutis: inflorescentiis brevibus in foliorum infimorum axillis vel in ramis; floribus admodum congestis, tetrameris: foliis oppositis, dimorphis, petiolatis, elliptico-obovatis, mag- nisque, vel sessilibus, late ovatis, parvisque, 11- vel 13-plinerviis. Inflorescences about 3 cm long, in the axils of the lowest leaves or beneath them, the peduncle about 1 cm long at the base with dense : ®Char. Gen. Pl. (1776) 47, 48, pl. 36. % Fruct. 1 (1788) 170, pl. 34. * Mant. (1767) 14. 8 Fam. Pl. 2 (1763) 88. 581. ~ 352 ROBINSON. brown pubescence about 4 mm long, above with much shorter and scattered pubescence; flowers somewhat crowded, short-bracted, the pedicels about 4.5 mm long: flowers wanting: fruit baccate, lilac to purple and blue, the calyx urceolate, in all 1 cm long, glabrous or slightly scurfy on the free portion, the ovarian part subglobose about 8 mm wide, contracted at the apex to 6 mm, the rim free for about 2.5 mm, with 4 minute teeth; ovary 4-celled, attached to the calyx along 4 lines, the ovules very numer- ous, minute. Climbing and rooting at many of the nodes, the stems terete, with gray bark, glabrescent; the ultimate branches hirsute: leaves opposite, those of a pair very different, the one kind on stout hirsute petioles 16 to 24 mm long, the subchartaceous lamina somewhat falcate, elliptic or elliptic-obovate, 18 to 23 em long, 7 to 11 cm wide, the other kind ovate, sessile and clasping, about 3 cm long, 2 cm wide, both kinds obtuse at the base and shortly acuminate at the apex, the smaller 11- or 13-nerved, the nerves separate to the base, the larger with equally numerous veins but the uppermost pair leaving the costa about 7 to 8.5 em from the base, the next pair 4.5 to 5 em, the next 1.5 to 2 cm, the next about 5 mm, the remaining one or two pairs fainter, subbasal, all united with the midrib or the succeeding by fairly numerous nervules; upper surface plumbeous, glabrous, under surface greenish, the nerves and veins yellow-hirsute, especially toward the base of the costa. Luzon, Province of Laguna, Mount Banajao, along a small stream at the base of the mountain, Bur. Sci. 976} Robinson. While reduced leaves are known in other species, especially in M. inaequifolia C. B. Rob. and to a less extent in 4M. involucrata Merr., they are here still more striking, resembling the spathes of aroids; the present species differs from both these others in the nature of its inflorescence. In the latter respect, it probably approaches M. cephalophora Merr. more closely than any other, but the peduncle is different, and the leaves have quite different venation. MELASTOMA (Burm.) Linn. Melastoma warrineri sp. nov. Frutex: inflorescentiis unifloris ad trifloris; floribus conspicue bibrac- teatis, bracteis calyceque sericeo-paleaceis ; calycis tubo quam lobi longiores breviore, lobis intermediis inconspicuis: foliis chartaceis, ellipticis vel fere ovalibus, basi acutis, apice acute acuminatis. Inflorescence a terminal, sessile, 1- to 3-flowered cyme, the pedicels 3 to 5 mm long, bearing at their bases two rigid appressed broadly elliptic- lanceolate bracts, deciduous after anthesis, 18 to 30 mm long, 7 to 11 mm wide, acuminately narrowed to a truncate base, acutely acuminate at the apex, their outer surface and the pedicels densely covered with appressed linear paleae about 1 mm long, coarsest in the middle of the bracts, their margins ciliate-serrate, the apex ciliate-acuminate, the margins of the bracts pilose-ciliate, their inner surfaces appressed-pilose: ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 353 calyx-tube 9 to 12 mm long, 8 to 9 mm in diameter, its lobes 10, the longer series triangular-lanceolate, straight or falcate, 19 to 20 mm long, 5 mm wide, acuminate, covered with paleae 1.5 to 3 mm long, longest and broadest near the middle of the tube, decreasing in density and breadth toward the apex of the lobes, bearing long cilia on their margins, these appressed except on the margins of the lobes; the intermediate 5 lobes 3 mm long, or including the acumen and paleae 5 mm long; petals 5, lilac, broadly oblanceolate or obovate, often oblique, 3.5 to 4 cm long, the apex truncate and toward its middle sometimes slightly retuse, always shortly acuminate, the acumen and the extreme base with tufted cilia, the margins ciliate; stamens 10, 5 fertile and 5 probably sterile but having anthers of approximately equal size, the fertile anthers lilac, connective pale-lilac, the spurs, filaments, and sterile anthers greenish; fertile anthers with filaments 13 to 14 mm long, the connective of similar length from the base of the anther to the filament, prolonged beyond the filament for 3 mm, the prolongation forked midway into 2 spathulate obscurely 2- forked lobes, fertile anthers 1 cm long; sterile anthers 8 mm long, the connective merely forming anteriorly 2 falcate-ovate horns immediately below the anthers, their filaments 1 em long; ovary more than half- superior, 1 em long, covered with sericeous paleae densely tufted at the strongly beaked apex, 5 celled, with very many small ovules; style ex- ceeding 2 cm in length, dilated toward the apex, the stigma plane. A bush about 2 m high, the branchlete terete, densely covered with ferruginous paleae, the nodes with a single whorl of sctae: petioles 13 to 25 mm long, lamina chartaceous, elliptic, elliptic-lanceolate, or almost oval, 9.5 to 16 cm long, 3.5 to 6 em wide, usually conspicuously ?-plinerved, the outer pair sometimes faint, sometimes with an additional faint pair, the base acute, the apex acutely acuminate, the upper surface densely covered with paleae adnate except for their appressed terminal setae, the margins ciliate, the under surface villose and on the larger veins somewhat setose. Luzon, Province of Tayabas (Infanta), mount Binuang, common in mossy forest at and above 900 m, Bur. Sci. 9370 Robinson. Named for Doctor Bb. Warriner, with whom I made the ascent, and who was the first to find the species. Closely allied to M. candidum D. Don, but distinguished by the much larger bracts, fewer-flowered inflorescences, and by many other characters. MEMECYLON Linn. \ Memecyion gracilipes sp. nov. Arbuscula glabra, ramulis teneris, tereteibus vel apice plus minusve angulatis: inflorescentiis axillaribus, rarissime terminalibus, longiter graciliterque pedunculatis; floribus breviter pedicellatis, parvis, pedice- llorum basi solum bracteatis, haud articulatis: foliis breviter petiolatis, lanceolatis, basi acutis, apice longiter acuminatis, uninerviis. 354 ROBINSON. Inflorescences axillary, lateral, or rarely terminal, the slender pedun- cles 26 to 28 mm long, about 7-flowered, the pedicels about 2 mm long, subtended at the base by lanceolate or ovate obtusely acuminate bracts mostly 0.5 mm long but unequal, no bracteoles upon the pedicels nor at the base of the white flowers, pedicels not articulated: calyx sub- eampanulate, 1.2 mm long, 1.6 mm wide at the apex, there forming 4 rounded lobes about 0.3 mm long; corolla apiculate in bud, hardly separable into 4 petals about 0.6 mm long; stamens 8, the filaments very short, the anthers about 0.5 mm long, the connective forming an obscure gland upon the back and a short spur at its base; ovary very small, 1-celled with about 8 snfall ovules; style 1 mm long. A small tree about 2 m high, its slender branchlets with dark-brownish or gray bark, terete or angled only near the apex, glabrous troughout: petioles about 1 mm long, lamina chartaceous, lanceolate or broadly lanceolate, 22 to 37 mm long, 7 to 12 mm wide, the base acute or sub- acute, the margins somewhat revolute, the apex forming an obtuse or subacute and often mucronate acumen for about one-third the length of the lamina; under surface tending to yellowish, always paler than the upper; only the costa evident, base traces of other venation only very rarely visible. Luzon, Province of Ilocos Norte, Mount Dagat, Bur, Sci. 7753 Ramos. Very distinct from all other Philippine species in the very slender peduncles of the inflorescence; probably nearest to M. cumingianum Presl, differing from it also by the much smaller leaves, ARALIACEAE. SCHEFFLERA Forst. Schefflera binuangensis sp. nov. Arbor: inflorescentiis terminalibus, paniculatis, sessilibus, dioicis ; ramis secundariis brevibus, floribus breviter pedicellatis: foliis longius- cule petiolatis, foliolis 4 vel 5, ovalibus vel oblongo-obovatis, basi ate apice acuminatis, venis utrinque 6 ad 8. Inflorescence terminal, paniculate, 9 em long, the lower Bunches arising from its base, the rachis and branches black except where they are covered with gray scurfy pubescence ; branches 3 to 7 em long; secondary branches distant except toward the apices of the primary, 2 to 4 mm long, bearing at their apices 3 to 5 flowers on pedicels about 1 mm long; pedicels continuous with the calyx; only staminate flowers seen; calyx hemispheric, 1 mm long, 2 mm wide, at the truncate apex, tomentellose; corolla calyptrate, but separable into 5 oblong or ovate petals 1.5 mm long, involute and adnate at the apex; stamens 5, inserted on the ex- treme base of the corolla, alternating with the petals, filaments 0.8 mm long, anthers suborbicular, 0.6 mm long; ovary inferior, 5-celled, often with minute ovules; style entirely wanting. : ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 355 A tree 8 m high, its trunk 10 cm in diameter, the branches with gray bark: leaves glabrous, palmately 4- or 5-foliolate; petioles 8.5 to 10 em long, 1.5 mm wide in the middle, conspicuously swollen to 6 to 7 mm at the base, and more gradually and less constantly toward the apex; petio- lules 18 to 35 mm long; lamina coriaceous, oval to oblong-obovate, 5.5 to 9 cm long, 3 to 6 em wide, the base acute, the margins revolute, the apex abruptly contracted into a blunt acumen 8 to 15 mm long; pairs of veins 6 to 8 with others nearly as prominent, loosely and often irregularly anastomosing. Luzon, Province of Tayabas (Infanta), Mount Binuang, in mossy forest at 930 m elevation, Bur. Sci. 9435 Robinson. Closely allied in the nature of its inflorescence to 8S. brevipes Merr., but in S. binwangensis this is much shorter, the petioles much longer and not winged, and the leaflets fewer and smaller. ERICACEAE. DIPLYCOSIA Blume. Diplycosia opaca sp. nov. Arbuscula epiphytica, inflorescentiis exceptis glabra: inflorescentiis axillaribus, 1-ad 3-floris, pedicellis brevibus: foliis ellipticis, coriaceis, basi acutis, apice retusis vel rarius truncatis, crasse apiculatis, margine inte- gris, revolutis; venis utrinque circa 3, obscuris. Flowers in the axils of present or fallen leaves, 1 to 3 at each node, fascicled, the pedicels 2 to 4 mm long, densely covered with nearly appres- sed pubescence: bracts at the base of the flowers paired, ovate obtusely acuminate, 2 mm long, pubescent near the margins and ciliate, together resembling a Cosmarium; calyx pinkish, urceolate, 3 mm long, divided two-thirds of the way to the base into 5 imbricate, ovate, subacute or obtuse ciliate lobes; corolla still undivided, 2 to 2.6 mm long; stamens 10, 1 mm long, the filaments longer than the unappendaged anthers ; ovary glabrous, less than 1 mm long, umbilicate, 5-celled, many-ovuled ; style very short, the undivided stigma barely exerted from the umbilicus. An epiphytic shrub, about 1 m high, the vegetative parts entirely glabrous, the bark of the older stems cinnamon-brown, that of the young- er branchlets more often gray: leaves with petioles 5 to 9 mm long, the lamina coriaceous, elliptic, 4 to 8.5 em long, 2 to 4 em wide, the base acute, the margins entire, revolute, the apex retuse or merely truncate, shortly and stoutly apiculate, the under surface with scattered, minute, black, glandular dots; all venation except the midrib very indistinct, but the lamina certainly triplinerved, with apparently two additional veins on each side of the midrib. : Luzon, Province of Tayabas (Infanta), Mount Binuang, in mossy forest at an sietvettion of 900 m, Bur, Sci. 9385 Robinson. The leaf-apex seems entirely different from that of any other species of the genus, at once separating it from D. merrittii, its nearer Philippine ally. ; 356 ROBINSON. * APOCYNACEAE. ALYXIA R. Br, Alyxia monticola sp. nov. Scandens, Alyxiae luzoniensi Merr. admodum similis, sed differt foliis majoribus longius petiolatis magis acuminatis magis conspicue venosis, et ramis crassioribus. Cymes axillary, few-flowered: flowers unknown: peduncles stout, about 1 em long, brown-tomentose; pedicels strongly 4-angled, 3 mm long, 2 mm wide, tomentose ; bracts at base of calyx 2, ovate, obtuse, 3 mm long; calyx deeply 5-parted, the segments similar to the bracts but slightly longer, pubescent on the costa and margins; stipe of fruit 6 mm long, pubescent, the fruits oval in outline, not constricted, up to 22 mm long, 12 mm in diameter. A woody vine, the branches about 5 mm in diameter at the base, the bark drying yellowish-green to dark-brown, the vegetative parts glabrous: leaves in whorls of 4 or 5; petioles 8 to 10 mm long, 1.5 to 2 mm wide; lamina subcoriaceous, oblong or oblong-oblanceolate, 8.5 to 14.5 cm long, 2.5 to 4.8 em wide, the base acute and decurrent, the margins slightly revolute, the apex abruptly contracted into an obtuse or subacute acumen 8 to 12 mm long; pairs of veins about 50, nearly straight, terminating in a slender lateral vein about 1 mm from the margin, the lamina espe- cially when viewed from the upper surface appearing distinctly margined. Luzon, Province of Tayabas (Infanta), Mount Binuang, in mossy forest at 840 m elevation, Bur. Sci. 9859 Robinson. The nearest alliance of the species seems to be with A. luzoniensis Merr., but it differs by the characters noted above. The leaves more nearly resemble those of A. monilifera Vidal, but. the structure of the fruit is conspicuously different, not constricted, and the size of its single compartment much greater than that of those of A. monilifera. LABIATAE. ACROCEPHALUS Benth. Aotoviptalts spicatus sp. nov. Herba, caule tetragono: floribus in capitulis terminalibus interrupte vel subconfluenter spicatis congestis; foliis anguste ellipticis vel anguste lanceolatis, grosse serratis, in petiolum marginatum decurrentibus. Inflorescence terminal, composed of about 8 interrupted or almost confluent spicate or subspicate heads, or on young branches in single heads, subtended by leafy bracts, the lower 12 mm long, 8 mm wide, de- creasing toward the apex; flowering bracts about 3 mm in diameter, suborbicular, acuminate, densely glandular, the outer surface white- villose along 10 to 12 lines near the base, the margins ciliate, each sub- tending about 10 flowers: calyx tubular, at anthesis the posterior lobe entire, elliptic, about 2.4 mm long, rounded at the apex, ciliate on the ALABASTRA PHILIPPINENSIA, III. 307 margins, the 2 lateral and 2 anterior lobes subequal to one another, definitely shorter than the posterior, linear-lanceolate, ciliate and pointed, each lobe with a median nerve, and separated from one another by a similar nerve, except that the lateral nerves of the posterior lobe are midway between the median nerve and the margin; corolla-tube about 2.6 mm long, 2-lipped for about 0.6 mm, the posterior lip divided into 4 subequal lobes to nearly the depth of the sinus between the lips, the lower lip entire, all lobes lanceolate-ovate, ciliate near their apices ; sta- mens 4, hardly declinate, the filaments swollen in the basal half, the anterior about 0.6 mm long, the posterior shorter, anthers globose, the cells confluent, less than 0.2 mm in diameter; style 2 mm long, shortly bifid at the apex; ovary 4-parted, 0.4 mm long, the glands small: fruit- ing calyx 5 to 6 mm long, erect or suberect; nutlets ovoid, 0.7 mm long, 0.4 mm wide, minutely tubercular along very numerous longitudinal lines. A branching herb, nearly 1 m high, the stems quadrangular except near the base, reddish and shortly villose on the angles, greenish and more densely pubescent in the furrows: leaves opposite or falsely whorled by the presence of similar but smaller ones which are at least sometimes the first on short lateral branches, narrowly elliptic or narrowly lanceo- late, including the petioles 3 to 7 cm long, 6 to 12 mm wide, the base _ gradually narrowed into the margined petiole, the lamina with 3 to 5 comparatively large teeth on each margin, acute at the apex, both surfaces glabrous or subglabrous except on the veins, densely glandular; pairs of veins equal in number to the teeth. Mrinpanao, District of Davao, Santa Cruz, Williams 2954 (type): District of Lanao, Camp Keithley, Mrs. Clemens 741. The species is very distinct from A. indicus (Burm.) O. Ktze., in the nature of the inflorescence; it is less certainly distinct from A. blumii Benth. (Oci acrocephal Blume), but the inflorescence of that species is described as capitate, and it has been reduced to A. indicus. Blume’s description is so short that it is difficult to draw conclusions. Nearly all the flowers on the type are smaller than herein stated, the figures are taken from the largest. seen. The plant has much the habit of a Dysophylla or of Hyptis spicigera Lam. RUBIACEAE. MUSSAENDA (Burm.) Linn. Mussaenda lanata sp. nov. Frutex vel arbuscula; inflorescentiis terminalibus, floribus spicatis; calycis lobis 5, lanceolatis, deciduis ; corolla aurantiaca, infundibuliforme, limbo breviter lobato, lcbis margine superiore truncatis apice breviter apiculatis; ovario biloculare, multiovulato: foliis longiter petiolatis, la- minis chartaceis, ovatis vel orbicularibus, basi acutis, apice acuminatis vel subacutis, venis utrinque circiter 13, tota planta, caulibus vetus- tioribus exceptis, dense pubescens. 358 ROBINSON. Flowers spiked in terminal subcorymbose inflorescences 10 to 20 cm long, the rachises fleshy, densely hoary- and brownish-pubescent; bracts linear-lanceolate or lanceolate, 5 to 7.5 mm long: calyx-tube 8 to 9 mm long, about 4 mm in diameter at the apex; calyx-lobes 5, lanceolate, 5.5 to 6.5 mm long, acute at the apex, deciduous, one of the lobes sometimes leaf-like, white, 5 cm long, the blade oval, 5-nerved, acutely acuminate at the base; corolla-tube 13 mm long, the lobes 5, valvate, about 1.5 mm long and 3.5 mm wide, very densely brown-tomentose within, the throat yellow-tomentose, the belt occupied by the anthers white-tomentose ; stamens 5, the filaments free from above 4 to 5 mm from the base of the corolla-tube, about 2 mm long; anthers lanceolate, nearly 4 mm long; style inserted in a pit formed by the short, white, free portion of the ovary, entire for 2 mm, then 2-lobed for 1.5 mm; ovary 2-celled, each cell containing very many small ovules; fruit fleshy, ovoid-globose, about 1 cm in diameter. A shrub or small tree, 2 to 3.5 m high, the bark of the older branches gray, the younger branchlets greenish-gray, somewhat angled: leaves of a pair usually unequal, the petioles 2 to 8 cm long, the lamina chartace- ous, orbicular to ovate, 12 to 24 cm long, 9 to 12 em wide, acutely acuminate at the base, at the apex subacute or forming a short acumen; primary lateral veins on each side of the costa usually 13; stipules inter- petiolar, ovate, long-acuminate, 8 to 18 mm long; upper surface of the lamina dark-green, under surface light-green, both, but especially the under, covered with soft whitish pubescence. Luzon, Subprovince of Abra, Manapnap, Bur. Sei. 7254 Ramos: Subprovince of Bontoc, Bauco, Vanoverbergh 1195: Subprovince of Benguet, near Baguio, Merrill 6681 (type), For Bur. 5078 Curran, Elmer 8976, Bur. Sci. 5827 Ramos; Sablan, Eimer 6195, Bur. Sci. 12588 Fénix, Williams 1558 ; Itogon, Williams 1001: Province of Zambales, Balimbraya, Bur. Sci. 5044 Ramos. Allied to M. anisophylla Vidal and M. villosa Wall., differing from both in the thicker, more densely pubescent, and usually larger and more numerously veined leaves, from the latter also in habit and by longer and thicker petioles. Order No. 413. A MANUAL OF PHILIPPINE SILK CULTURE. By Cuaruss S, BANKs. (Publication of the Bureau of Science.) Paper, $0.75 United States currency, postpaid. A Manual of Philippine Silk Cuiture is a practical guide to the cultivation of the silkworm in the Tropics. It is based upon several years of experimental work in the actual production of commercial silk in the Philippine Islands. The book is generously illustrated with plates showing the stages of development of the silkworm, apparatus used in rearing the silkworm and spinning the silk, and working plans of a model silk-house. Order No. 415. PHILIPPINE HATS. By C. B. Rosrnson. (Reprinted from Section C. Philippine Journal of Science, Vol. VI, No. 2.) Price, $0.50 United States currency, postpaid. The work covers the whole field of the subject, the origin and history of hat making so far as the Philippines are concerned, the materials used, methods of preparation, the actual hats and the difference between them, their prices, statistics of the export trade, brief comparisons with the products of other countries in the eastern Tropics, and the commercial situation and outlook. It embodies also short notes on mat making and other allied industries. NOTE,—Orders should be sent to the Business Manager, Philippine Journal of Science, Manila, or to any of the below-listed agents. Please give Order Number. FOREIGN AGENTS. The Macmillan Company, 64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York City, U. S. A. Messrs. Wm. Wesley & Son, 28 Essex Street, Strand, London, W. C., England. Mr. Martinus Nijhoff, Nobelstraat 18, The Hague, Holland. Messrs. Mayer & Miiller, Prinz Louis Ferdinandstrasse 2, Berlin, N. W., Germany. Messrs. Kelley & Walsh, Limited, 32 Raffles Place, Singapore, Straits Settlements. Messrs. A. M. & J. Ferguson, 19 Baillie Street, Colombo, Ceylon. CIRCULARS AND DESCRIPTIVE MATTER SENT ON APPLICATION. Order No. 412. THE SUGAR INDUSTRY IN THE ISLAND OF NEGROS. By Herpert 8. WALKER. 145 pages, 10 photographic plates, and 1 map. Price $1.25 United States currency, postpaid. ABSTRACT OF CONTENTS. Page. Introduction; general and geographical information regarding Negros ........ ) Mountains, rivers, and climate ll The sugar-producing districts of Negros 14 History of sugar production in Negros; varieties of cane grown in Negros; eane diseases and insect enemies; nationality of the planters; native labor; difficulties, past and present 16 The soil of Negros compared with that of other sugar-producing countries.. 68 Average composition of the purple or native sugar cane in Negros; other varieties of cane grown in Negros; cane in the Hawaiian Islands; Egyptian cane; Java cane; Louisiana cane; West Indian cane; Negros as compared with other countries in respect to the quality of cane; desirability of introducing other varieties of cane 76 The cultivation of sugar cane and the production of sugar as carried on at the present time in Negros; preparation of the soil; preparation of — * the seed; planting; cultural operations after planting; cultivation of ratoon canes; period of growth of the cane; cost of cultivation; cutting the cane; transporting the cane to the mill; cost of cutting ‘the cane and transporting it to the mill 82 Manufacture of sugar from the cane; extraction of the juice; manufacture of sugar from the juice; quality of the sugar produced in Negros; cost of manufacture; transportation and sale of the sugar; estimate of aver- age cost of same 92 Quantitative experiments to determine the weight of sugar produced from a given weight of cane .. 114 Calculation of the average cost of producing sugar in Negros by the methods now employed; cost for labor alone; estimate of fixed charges for main- tenance and depreciation of plant and interest on the capital invested; total cost of production 123 Possibilities for improvement; in cultivation; in manufacture; advantages of a change to modern methods of manufacture; the future of Negros; summary; appendix; an investigation to discover if diseases of the sugar cane exist in Negros 126 Index 143 NOTE.—Orders should be sent to the Business Manager, Philippine Journal of Science, Manila, or to any of the below-listed agents. Please give Order Number. FOREIGN AGENTS. i CIRCULARS AND DESCRIPTIVE MATTER SENT ON APPLICATION. Order No. 411. INDO-MALAYAN WOODS. By Frep W. Foxwortny. (Being Section C, No. 4, Vol. IV, of the Philippine Journal of Science.) 182 pages, 9 photographic plates. Price $0.50 United States currency, postpaid. TABLE OF CONTENTS. I. Introduction. a. Erroneous popular notions with regard to eastern timbers. b. Object of this work. c. Definition of the Indo-Malayan region. d. Review of previous work and acknowledgments. Il. Properties of Wood. a. Woods of Tropics and Temperate regions compared. b. Weight and hardness, tables. c. Strength, work of Newton, Gamble and Gardner. d. Odor, color, taste. III. Suitability of different woods for special purposes. a. Enemies of wood. b. Woods exposed to salt water. c. Ship and boat building. _ IV. Rare, ornamental, or precious woods. V. Comparative chart of common names. VI. Timbered areas and future supplies of wood. VII. Species notes. VIII. Index. 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VI DECEMBER, 1911 No. 6 CYATHEAE SPECIES NOVAE ORIENTALES. By Epwin BINGHAM COPELAND. (From the College of Agriculture, University of the Philippines, Los Bafos, P. ¥) Cyathea subsessilis Copel. sp. nov. Fronde 110 em alta, 40 cm lata, subsessile, utrinque angustata ; stipite 5 cm vel ultra alto, sparse tuberculato, supra paleis fuscis 2 cm longis ornato ; rhachi sursum glabrescente inerme, deorsum simul stipitis ; pinnis infimis sensim valde reductis, medialibus 22 cm longis, subsessilibus, acutis, rhachibus quadratis, supra hirsutis, infra glabris, inermibus; pin- nulis 3-4 cm longis, 10-12 mm latis, sessilibus, obtusis, subcoriaceis, fere ad costam pinnatifidis, costa supra setosa, aliter glabris ; segmentis 5 mm longis, 3 mm latis, rotundatis, subintegris; venis utroque latere 3-5, plerumque furcatus et in ala soriferis, soris subcostularibus, indusio nitido, laete brunneo, primo mammiforme. Samoa, Savaii, Maugaloa, Vaupel,. Plantae Samoenses 424, March, 1909. A decidedly peculiar and distinct species. Cyathea deorsilobata Copel. sp. nov. Rhachi fere 2 cm crassa glabra, brunnea, aculeolata ; pinna 65 cm longa, 25 cm lata, brevistipitata, rhachi minutius tuberculata, glabrescente ; pin- nulis sessilibus, 12.5 em longis, 3 cm Iatis, caudatis, rhachi deorsum infra minute furfuracea, supra pilis sparsis ochroleucis ornata, sursum glabra; pinnulis ™ infimis subsessilibus, sequentibus adnatis falcatis, ob- tusis, herbaceis, supra costaque glabris atroviridibus, infra minutissime hirsutis, parte inferiore pinnulae quaeque fertile et inciso-serrata, versus apices integris ; venis utroque latere ca. 15, inferioribus bis furcatis; soris ° 360 COPELAND. in alis superioribus insertis, medialibus, laete brunneis, indusio tenue, persistente, . Samoa, Savaii, Maugaloa, alt. 800 m, Vaupel, Plantae Samoenses 471, March, 1906, Near C. affinis (Forst.) Swtz., but conspicuously different in texture and in having the secondary pinnules broad and entire near the obtuse tip. C. suluensis Baker and C. Cea Baker, differ in having their pinnules entire og head we st F . & Cyathea leichardtiana (F. vy. Muell.) Copel. comb. nov. Alsophila leichardtiana F. v. Muell. Fragm. 5 (1865) 53. We have this fern, from Killarney; from the Queensland Herbarium, under the name Alsophila australis. The two are readily distinguished by the character of the rachis. Cyathea propinqua Mett. has been a veritable drag-net. The two following species received here under this name agree with it in the origin of the lowest inferior vein, naked rachises, and texture, but are Otherwise very distinct, and the second is hardly to be regarded 'as a near relative. Cyathea Vaupelii Copel, sp. nov. Species gregis C. propinquae .Mett.. et sub nomine illo distributa, sed facile ob, pinnam sessilem, pinnulam obtusam, costam infra minute squamuliferam et lacinias serrulatas distinguenda. Rhachibus infra gla- bris, stramineis vel brunneis, inermibus; pinna ca. 40 cm longa, acuta; pinnulis sessilibus 6 cm longis, 17 mm latia, vix-ad costam pinnatifidis ; segmentis 5mm latis, obtusis, subfalcatis, sursurn serrulatié, glabris, her- baceis ; venis utroque latere ca. 6 quarum plerumque 4 furcatis fertilibus; soris modialibus, indusio membranaceo, persistente. ; "Samoa Savaii, Vaipouli, Vaupel, Plantae Samoenses 184. Cyathea Betchei Copel, Sp. nov. Rhachibus infra glabris, stramineis, inermibus; -pinna 60 cm foo 22 cm lata, stipitata; pinnulis infimis reductis et deflexis, sequentibus stipitatis, horizontalibus,, acuminatis, usque ad 25.mm latis, deorsum ad costam infra nigrescentem minutissime squamuliferis, supra pallide hir- sutis; pinnulis ™ infimis vix adnatis rhachiscopice hastatis; segmentis medialibus pinnulae! 3 mm latis, serratis sursum aisgtoriins, acutis, subfalcatis, herbaceis, supra atroviridibus glabrescentibus, infra pallidis secus marginem densius alibi sparse squamulis minutis albidis vestitis; venis utroque latere “10-12, ‘plerisque, furcatis ; soris medialibus, indusio globos6, mémbranaceo, ' non persistente. ; ‘SAMOA, Upolu, leg. ua Betche, 1881. Comm. National Herbarium, of New reas Wales. : : “Cyathea truncata (Brack. ) Copel. Sg nov. : eee ; ; _ Alsophila truncata Brack. U.'S. Expl. Exp. 16 (1954) 289. " Our spetimen (Vaupel, Plantae Samoenses 430), is a piniia nearly 60 em long! 16 em wide:. |The secondary pinnules are auriculate on'the upper side). |. 1 ene 253308 6 CYATHEAE SPECIES NOVAE ORIENTALES. 361 Cyathea hemichlamydea Copel. sp. nov. Stipite nigro, spinis parvis munito, supra paleis atro-castaneis linear- ibus rigidis 15 mm longis vestito, infra pinnas infimas reductas remotas ca. 30 cm alto, utroque latere faciei superioris serie aerophorum linearium ornato ; rhachi infra nigra, tuberculata, glabrescente ; pinna 45 cm longa, 18 cm lata, sessile, acuminata, rhachi infra minute tuberculata, pilis minutis deciduis adspersa, supra pilosa et paleis linearibus sparsissime vestita ; pinnulis infimis reductis, sequentibus 9 cm longis, 2 cm latis, acuininatia basi subsessile inaequale, fere ad costam supra pilosam infra paleaceam pinnatifidis; segmentis proximis, 3-4 mm latis, apice rotun- datis et serrulatis, herbaceis, lamina glabra, costulis supra glabris, infra subsquamuliferis; venis utroque latere ca. 7, inferioribus furcatis; soris _ costularibus inferioribus paullo remotioribus, indusio faciem douche sori solummodo subtegente. Borneo, Sambas, Beng Karum Mountain, alt. 900 m, Brooks 102. Like 0. heterochlamydea Copel. of the Philippines in the peculiar indusium. - Cyathea inciso-serrata Copel. sp. nov. Rhachi brunnea, minute et sparse punctulata, infra ae vel mainte cente, supra minute velutina; pinna ca. 50 cm longa, 15 cm lata, sub- sessile, acuminata, rhachi ints paleis minutis angustis paucis sparse vestita, inerme; pinnulis inferioribus paullo diminutis, sequentibus bre- vistipitatis, 8 cm longis, usque ad 25 mm latis, acuminatis, fere ad costam in segmenta 4 mm lata obtusa inciso-serrata herbacea inecisis, segmento infimio basiscopico reducto integro, costa infra paleis fusco-ferrugineis lanceolatis interdum bullatis vestita, supra pilosa; costula supra glabra, — infra squamulis bullatis caducis vestita; venis bis furcatis, soris in alam superiorem insertis, indeque medialibus ; indusio nullo, paraphysibus mul- tis, sporangia paullo superantibus. \ SARAWAK, Mount Singie, alt. 600 m, Brooks 105. __ Near 0. assimilis Hook., but more ample, and exindusiate. Re Cyathea ampla Copel. sp. nov. “Apice, truncis radices emittente, paleis wets lets thins angus- tissimis 2-2.5 em longis densissime obtecto ; stipite basi paleis latioribus 1-2 cm longis ciliatis ad latera vestito, sursum glabrescente castaneo, verruculoso’; rhachibus tomento minuto lacerato castaneo partim hic illue deciduo vintitia: castaneis, inermibus ; -pinnis stipitatis, medialibus max- imis, 40 cm’ longis, fere 20 em latis, acutis; pinnulis stipitatis, inframed- ialibus maximis, 10 cm longis, 2.5 ’em latis, pinnatifidis vel basi pinnatis et pinnulis™ plerumque adnatis, diminutis ; segmentis 6 mm latis, obtusis, sursum grosse. serratis, herbaceis, lamina glabra, infra pallidiore, costis supra minute pilosis, infra rarius costulisque deorsum squamulis minutis guna a laceris vestitis ; venulis utroque. latere. wat, ee Saige 8 y ridge 362 COPELAND. bis furcatis; soris alis superioribus earum insertis indeque fere marginal- ibus, indusio hyalino mox fisso. Sarawak, Mount Singie, Brooks 106. Cyathea leucocarpa Copel. sp. nov. Trunci apice et basi stipitis radicibus spinosis et paleis atrocastaneis nitidis subulatis rigidis 1 cm longis obtectis; stipite ultra 30 cm alto, castaneo, basi nigrescente, tomento ferrugineo deciduo vestito, verru- culoso, basi 1-1.5 cm crasso; rhachibus rufis, infra primo paleis concolor- ibus minutis vestitis, glabrescentibus, fere inermibus; pinnis subses- silibus, 45 cm longis ca. 13 cm latis, acuminatis; pinnulis brevistipitatis, 7.5 cm longis, 15 mm latis, acuminatis, basi truncatis, fere ad costam pinnatifidis ; segmentis 3.5 mm latis, apice rotundatis, obscure serrulatis, lamina glabra membranacea, costa supra saturate rufo-pilosa, infra paleis opacis integris acuminatis sparsis vestita, costulis squamulis bullatis sparsis ornatis ; venis utroque latere ca. 8, plerisque furcatis; soris in alis venarum insertis, indeque subcostularibus, de lamina superiore conspicue immersis, exindusiatis, primo ob paraphyseos fulvo-rufis, dein ob sporan- gia exposita albidis. Sakawak, Mount Singie, alt. 600 m, Brooks 107. Near to O. melanopus (Hassk.) Copel. Cyathea poiensis Copel. sp. nov. Trunco teste Brooks ca. 90 cm alto; stipite inerme ca. 18 em longo, castaneo, pedem versus paleis integris lanceolatis 1 cm longis ferrugineis _ Vestito et ramis paucis subacanthoideis 2-3 em longis munito; fronde vix 1 m alta, 40 cm lata, utrinque angustata, rhachi dense strigosa non paleacea ; pinnis infimis diminutis et deflexis; medialibus 23 cm longis, 6 em latis, stipitatis, acuminatis, rhachi ut frondis; pinnulis infimis reductis, sequentibus 3 cm longis, 9 mm latis, brevistipitatis, basi cuneato- truncatis, apice rotundatis, $ ad costam pinnatifidis, lobis 2.5 mm latis, integris, subfalcatis, obtusis, lamina subcoriacea, glabra, infra pallida: costa supra doersum pilosa, infra pilis et squamulis bullatis mixtis ves- tita, costulis sparse squamuliferis, venis utroque latere 3-4, simplicibus ; soris medialibus, parvis, indusio nullo vel transeunte. Sarawak, Mount Poi, alt. 900—1,200 m, common but seldom fertile, Brooks 101. Cyathea stipitulata Copel. sp. nov. Species gregis C. integrae Baker, C. polypodae Baker affinis; rhachi inerme sordide brunnea subtus glabrescente, supra minute adpresso- tomentosa; pinnis patentibus, 40 cm longis, 12 cm latis, brevistipitatis, acutis, costa quadrangulari subtus sparse furfuracea, badia; pinnulis utroque latere 20-25, stipitatis stipitibus 3 mm longis tomentosis, valde _eordatis, horizontalibus, basi 14 mm latis, sursum sensim angustatis, fere ad costam pinnatifidis, costis supra badio-piliferis, subtus basi- CYATHEAE SPECIES NOVAE ORIENTALES. 363 busque costularum squamulis castaneis plerisque laceris sparse vestitis ; segmentis ca. 4 mm latis, oblongis, obtusis, crenulatis, subcoriaceis, glabris; venulis utroque latere ca. 6; soris globosis, medialibus, indusio fere 1 mm diametro, badio, sat persistente. Sarawak, Mount Matang, alt. 300 m, Brooks 104. “The base of the stipe slightly spiny with numerous lanceolate brown scales 2 em long.” Cyathea longipinna Copel. sp. nov. Arbor alta C. melanopodi (Hassk.) affinis, qua specie rhachi castanea tuberculata pinnis angustis basi haud angustatis, costis infra paleaceis, et segmentis serratis differt; stipite basi castaneo nitido, paleis atro- castaneis nitidis lineari-sublulatis 1 em longis caducis vestito, ubique spinoso; rhachi glabrescente, spinulosa, sursum rhachibusque badiis pin- narum tuberculatis; pinnis ca. 45 cm longis, 9-11 cm Jatis, infimis stipitatis reductis et deflexis utrinque angustatis, medialibus maximis, horizontalibus, sessilibus, acutis, rhachi supra velutina, subtus glabra, basi incrassata, pilosa, et sursum ad rhachin frondis macula parva pallida notata; pinnulis utroque latere ca. 30, sessilibus, horizontalibus, plerisque rectis a basibus 9-11 mm latis ad apices serratos sensim angustatis, vix ad costas pinnatifidis, costa supra deorsum velutina infra paleis stramineis vel badiis ovatis dense vestita; segmentis proximis, 2 mm Iatis, subfalcatis, obtusis, infra pallidis, lamina glabra herbacea ; costulis infra inter soros paleaceis, aliter glabris; venis fructiferis fur- catis, superioribus simplicibus; soris costularibus exindusiatis, badiis, contiguis et confluentibus. Sarawak, Mount Matang, alt. 800 m, Brooks 103. Cyathea trichophora Copel. sp. nov. Stipite 50 cm alto, basi paleis stramineis acicularibus 1 cm longis dense, supra basin superne paleis concoloribus 15 mm longis 2 mm latis vestito, sursum decidue pilifero, asperulo; fronde ca. 120 cm alta, 50-60 em lata, utrinque angustata; pinnis infimis 10 cm longis, deflexis, vix pinnatis, medialibus maximis, 30-35 cm longis, 10 em latis, sub- sessilibus, rhachibus pilis albidis 2 mm longis vestitis; pinnulis sessili- bus, ca. 5 em longis, 1 cm latis, obtusis, basi cuneato-truncatis ultra medium laminam pinnatifidis, herbaceis, pallidis, lamina glabra, costis infra sparse piliferis et squamuliferis; lobis truncatis, denticulatis, 3-4 mm. longis, 2-3 mm latis, proximis; venulis utroque latere lobi 4~-5, plerisque simplicibus ; soris medialibus, vix 1 mm latis, indusio vestigiale vel nullo, sporangiis cum paraphysibus mixtis. Luzon, Pronvice of Laguna, San Antonio, Phil. Pl. 949 Ramos, August, 1910. Bur. Sci. 12053 Ramos from the same locality is the same species, and in full fruit, but the frond in only 22 em wide and barely bipinnate. In appearance it is remarkably like Dryopteris Filie-Mas var. parallelogramma. Very distinct from any of our other species. 364 COPELAND. Cyathea auriculifera Copel. sp. nov. yo gey Rhachi castanea, minute furfuracea, sparse et minute echinulata; pinna mihi missa 50 cm longa,’12 cm lata, fere sessile, rhachi sub’ indu- mento denso minuto castaneo nigra sparsissime echinulata; pinnulis subsessilibus, horizontalibus, 14 mm latis, abrupte acutis: acumine in- tegro, ubique pinnatis; pinnulis™ brevistipitatis, 2 mm latis, obtusis, inferioribus utroque latere auricula una suborbiculare libera’ ornatis, aliter integris, medialibus basi truncatis et inaequilateralibus, supra glabris et viridibus, infra sparse paleaceis et perpallidis; venis utroque latere 7 vel 8, inferioribus furcatis, medialibus solummodo fertilibus ; soris costalibus, confertis, laete brunneis, indusio membranaceo, : Papua, Goodenough Bay, alt. 1,200 m, growing in scrub, 0, Kiny 227. A very peculiar species, which, in form only, is somewhat suggestive. of .C. truncata. ; b A diagnosis was also prepared for Cyathea botryocarpa, founded da We: 57 King, but in the meantime Rosenstock has published this as Alsophila biformis in Fedde’s Repertorium 9 (1911) 423, issued August 15. Assuming that “biformis” and “dimorpha” are properly, different names, I will call this Cyathea biformis (Rosenstock) comb. nov. ¥ : Rosenstock also describes Cyathea Kingii, based on. King’s No. 277. I have. three sheets of this fern; and do not see’ why it should not be called Cyathea fusca Baker. Beside these two Cyatheas, Rosenstock publishes six new speciés from King’s: collection; I published three of these six weeks earlier, and one Pteris gracillima, is. not new.: When I put Mr. King: in communication with the Buitenzorg Garden, I did not suspect that it would result in double publication, or in my having to publish i in haste to avoid it. ; : THE PHILIPPINE JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, ©. Borany. Vol. VI, No. 6, December, 1911. _ SIMARUBACEARUM GENUS NOVUM PHILIPPINENSE. | Auctore L. RADLKOFER. (Munich, Bavaria.) pen HEBONGA Radlk. gen. nov. (Aglaia sp, Merrill in sched. et in Diction. Plant Names Philip. Islands (1903) 66*, vulgo Hebong in lingua Mangyan ex Merrill in sched. et 1. ¢. ). Flores unisexuales, dioeci? (masculi tantum visi), parvuli. Ralyx, minutus, profunde (4—) 5-partitus, partibus deltoideis patulis vix.ima basi subimbricatis puberulis glandulisque raris capitatis breviter. stipi-, tatis adspersis, intus glabris, cellulis resinigeris parce persitis. Petala (4-) 5, calyce pluries longiora, ex obovato-lanceolato cuneata, acuta, margine apiceque subinflexa, valvata, nervo mediano prominulo, venis arcuato-recurvis anastomosantibus teneris, oblique patula, praeter ex-. timum apicem minutim puberulum utrinque glabra, e flayido fuseescentia, _ cellulas resinigeras paucas foventia. Stamina 10, cum petalis sub-disco inserta, petalis sesquilongiora; filamenta filiformia, subflexuosa, glabra (squamulis basi nullis) ; antherae in, alabastro extrorsae, .suborbiculares, supra basin emarginatam prope medium ventrem affixae, longitudinaliter dehiscentes; pollinis granula trigono-subglobosa, triporosa. Discus par- vus, annularis, tumidus, medio paullum depressus,. glaber. . Pistilli rudimentum. in disci centro minimum, ovatum, anceps, 2-loculare, loeu- lis superne liberis, singulis in apiculum (stylum rudimentarium) parvum subincurvum desinentibus ; gemmulae rudimentariae in loculis Solitariae, angulo centrali insertae. Flores feminei fruetusque ignoti. Arbores. Rami—(folia decerpta ‘tantum visa paniculaeque). Folia magna, imparipinnata, 8- ad 15-juga, longiuscule petiolata; foliola opposita vel superiora alterna, intermedia quam infima summaque ma- jora’ (ad 18 cm longa, 5 cm lata), nunc elongate ovato-lanceolata, sub- falcata, inaequilatera (latere interiote ‘latiore’ longioreque), ‘acutata, basi ‘valde obliqua (H. obliqua), nunc elliptica» subacuta, param inae- — se ieaoinle einen ne ‘eoriaceo-chaittaed, sieca | sie, Yab, Pobl (Philip.) 8 (1908). 365 366 _ RADLKOFER. fragilia, pinnatinervia, nervo mediano supra costula acuta notato infra obtuse prominente striato ductibus resinigeris (supra singulo, infra duobus juxtapositis) percurso, lateralibus supra subimpressis subtus prominulis oblique patulis ante marginem bifurcatis et anastomosanti- bus (ductibus resinigeris destitutis), glabriuscula vel subtus molliter pubescentia (H. mollis), pilis 1-cellularibus pachydermicis curvatis basi dilatatis, fuscescentia, subopaca, subtus papillosa, papilliis brevibus ob- tusis cuticula striata obductis, nunc e media tantum (H. mollis), nunc e tota cellularum superficie emergentibus tumque basi contiguis (H. obliqua), diachymate (ut et cortice petioli) cellulis resinigeris persito, epidermide paginae superioris mucigera; petiolus teres, ima basi com- planatus et quodammodo dilatatus, ut et rhachis teretiuscula paullulum complanata supra linea elevata notata ductibus resinigeris compluribus intra et prope medullae coronam nec non supra vasorum fasciculos accessorios per medullam in seriem transversalem dispositis percursus. Paniculae axillares? (decerptae tantum visae), fere dimidiam foliorum partem aequantes, pauciramosae, subferrugineo-puberulae, pilis crispulis transversim pluriseptatis, rhachi superne ramis ramulisque conferte cincinnos sessiles glomeruliformes gerentibus iisque ductibus resinigeris ad medullae peripheriam percursis; alabastra primum globosa subses- silia, denique claviformia, 3 mm longa, pedicellis aequilongis puberulis suffulta; bracteae bracteolaeque minutae, deltoideae, puberulae. Flores expansi diametro ca. 6 mm. Species 2, philippinenses. Genus floris, praesertim gynoecii indole antherisque extrorsis nec non characteribus anatomicis (ductibus resinigeris medullaribus usque nervum foliolorum medianum extensis) affine videtur generi Soulamea; differt habitu, petalis valvatis, cellulis quoque resinigeris (non solum ductibus). per foliola et floris partes dissitis atque foliolis subtus papillo- sis, quibus rebus inter Simarubaceas stamina esquamata exhibentes quodammodo accedit ad quasdam Ai/anthi species. Veram affinitatem fructus docebit. 1. H. obliqua Radlk. sp. nov. : Aglaia sp. Merrill, cf. supra. Vulgo Hebong, cf. supra. j Folia praelonga, ad 15-juga; foliola opposita vel superiora alterna, elongate ovato-lanceolata, subfalcata, inaequilatera, apice sensim acutata, basi quam maxime obliqua, latere interiore latiore longioreque rotundato (fere semicordato), latere exteriore angustiore breviore sensim angustato, longiuscule petiolulata,, petiolulis angulosis, subcoriacea, glabra, subtus papillis latioribus obtuse conicis ornata, fusco-olivacea; reliqua generis. Arbor 12 m alta. Folia petiolo adjecto 50 em aequantia vel paullo SIMARUBACEARUM GENUS NOVUM PHILIPPINENSE. 367 superantia; foliola cum petiolulis 1 cm longis ad 18 em longa, 4.5 em lata. Paniculae rami 15 em longi. In Philippinarum insula Mindoro: H. D. Merrill n. 2176! (Bongabong, m. Maj. 1903, alab.; Hb. Manil.); H. Hickmann n. 6! (ibid., m. Febr. 1903, alab.; id. Hb.). 2. H. mollis Raldk. sp. nov. Folia sat longa, ca. 8-juga; foliola opposita, elliptica, subacuta, basi paullulum inaequilatera, oblique subovata, brevius petiolulata, petiolulis complanatis, chartacea, supra praeter nervos laxe puberulos glabra, subtus molliter pilosa et papillis tenuioribus rotundato-capitatis ornata, olivaceo-viridia ; reliqua generis. Folia petiolo 11 cm longo adjecto ad 50 cm longa; foliola cum petio- lulis 5 mm longis ad 13 cm longa, 5 em lata. Paniculae 22 cm longae, ramis 10 cm longis. In Philippinarum insula Mindanao: H. N. Whitford et W. I. Hutchinson For. Bur. n. 9443! (Zamboanga, m. Febr. 1908, flor.; ex H. Manil. comm.). THE PHILIPPINE JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, C. BorTany. Vol. VI, No. 6, December, 1911. THE PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. By E. D. MERRILL. (From the Botanical Section of the Biological Laboratory, Bureau of Science, Manila, P. I.) In the pre-Linnean botanical literature I have found but a single reference to’ Philippine Begonia, Acetosa nigritarum of Kamel, pub- lished in Ray’s “Historia Plantarum,” and on which Steudel later based the name Begonia nigritarum. Except for the somewhat casual mention of Acetosa nigritarum by Dryander,® no additional references to the Philippine species are to be found until the publication of Blanco’s “Flora de Filipinas” in 1837, where a single species is described, but erroneously referred to Begonia capensis L. No additional forms are included in the second edition of Blanco’s work, nor in the third, so far as that edition is a reprint of the second. Begonia capensis Blanco, non L., is manifestly identical with Acetosa nigritarum Kamel= Begonia nigritarum Steud. (B. rhombicarpa A. DC.). In 1854 A. Gray described two additional species of Philippine Be- gonia and credited a third to the Archipelago, based on material col- lected in Luzon’ by the Wilkes U. S. Exploring Expedition,* and in the same year Klotzsch‘ published the description of a single species, as Petermannia, identical with one described by Gray. In 1864 A. DeCandolle’s monograph of the family appeared*® in which 10 species in two genera were credited to the Archipelago. The number of species was increased to 13 by F.-Villar in 1880 ° but Villar’s list is reliable only so far as he followed DeCandolle’s monograph as to species credited to the Archipelago by the latter author. In 1904 Warburg published the descriptions of 10 additional Philip- pine species of Begonia,’ making a total of about 20 valid species - 13: Suppl. (1704) 14. : : cet ?Trans. Linn. Soe. + (1791) 171. pe Soest ge _ 8 Bot, Wilkes U, S. Explor. Exped. (1854) 658. "4Monatsber. Berl. Akad. (1854) 124. » -\ #Prodr. 15 (1864) 266-408. +, ot) 1-8 News App. (1880): 98-99, 0! ? Perk. Frag. Fl. Philip. (1904) 51-56. By 9 MERRILL. definitely known from the Archipelago at the beginning of botanical exploration under. the American administration. Since that date a few additional species have been described in the publications of the Bureau of Science, and in 1910 five species were described by Mr. Elmer under the title “New Species of Begonia.”* In this last paper the sections to which the several species belong are not indicated, and through over- sight the capsules are all described as the “seed”; in this paper it is well to note that the capsule descriptions and measurements are ex- clusive of the wings, while in the following enumeration the descrip- tions and measurements include the wings. As arranged in the present paper the Philippine material available for study is distributed among fifty-nine species, all of which are ap- parently endemic. The majority of the species are referable to two sections, Petermannia and Diploclinivm, both of which reach their maximum development in the Philippines. A single species is referable to the very distinct section Sphenanthera, which has been treated by several authors as worthy of generic rank, and one of two of the forms treated under the section Diplocliniwm may eventually prove to be referable to some other section. The greater proportion of our species are of local occurrence, their ranges being much restricted, which in general is true of the entire family. A few, such as Begonia nigritarum Steud., as interpreted by me, and B. pseudo-lateralis Warb., are found in most parts of the Archipelago in proper habitats. Here as elsewhere, Begonias are found in shaded, especially damp ravines, on banks and cliffs along small streams especially on seepage slopes, rarely on the broader slopes in forests. Some are found on more or less exposed cliffs that become thoroughly dry in the dry season, others are never found except in perennially damp and shaded ravines, and still others are never found outside of the limits of the mossy forests on our higher mountains. Most of the species do not seem to have a great altitudinal range, but Begonia nigritarum, as here interpreted, extends from sea level in some regions to an altitude of about 1,200 meters in other regions. In Manila a number of exotic forms are cultivated by local gardeners, but no attempt has been made to determine these in the present paper. It is believed, however, that many of our indigenous species are worthy of cultivation as ornamental plants, although little attempt seems to have been made to introduce our local forms into cultivation. Begonia nigritarum is not infrequently found in local gardens, but this is the only endemic species I have observed in Manila. Probably the chief reason why more of the local forms have not been successfully cultivated in Manila is that the climatic conditions in the vicinity of the city are * Leafl. Philip. Bot. 2 (1910) 735-740. PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. 371 not especially adapted to the culture of species that require a relatively high humidity. The majority of our species apparently have well developed distin- guishing characters, but in some groups, notably Begonia nigritarum and its immediate allies, distinctive characters are rather obscure, and the present treatment of the Begonia nigritarum group, as well as of some others will doubtless be modified in the future as more material becomes available for comparison. Another group of closely allied forms are the five species including and following Begonia klemmei. Frequently specimens will be found that in vegetative and floral characters so closely resemble each other that it is difficult or impossible to distinguish between them, yet when mature fruits are secured, the capsules will be found to be entirely different, hence the desirability of securing as nearly complete material of each species as is possible. In addition to the rich collections of Philippine material in the Her- barium of the Bureau of Science, the author has had an opportunity to examine types of cotypes of nearly all the Philippine species preserved in various American and European herbaria, and several of the species described by European authors are represented in the Herbarium of the Bureau by cotypes. Although in the following enumeration the number of Philippine species has. been increased to fifty-nine, it confidently is expected that future botanical exploration will add a number of additional forms. In the time that elapsed between the inception and completion of the manuscript of the present paper about 15 distinct forms were added to the collections through the medium of recent botanical exploration, while several apparently undescribed species are represented in the herbarium by incomplete material. KEY TO THE PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. ei Capsules not or very tardily dehiscent, very obscurely or not at all winged; coarse, erect, branched herbs with rather dense, axillary inflorescences. § SPHENANTHERA ......- 1. B. pseudo-lateralis 1. Capsules distinctly winged, dehiscing early. 2. Staminate flowers with 2 sepals and no petals, or petals very rarely present; erect, more or less branched or simple plants, herbaceous or suffrutescent. § PETERMANNIA. : ; 3. Staminate and pistillate flowers axillary, solitary or fascicled. 4. Leaves strongly and obliquely cordate at the base......... 2. B. robinsonii 4, Leaves gradually narrowed to the acute or obtuse, slightly inequilateral, scarcely or but slightly cordate base. : 5. Stems and leaves rather densely clothed with long, slender, brown hairs 3. B. ciliifera 5. Whole plant glabrous or only slightly hairy. : 6. Leaves distinctly and irregularly lobed.............. 4. B. mindanaensis 6. Leaves not lobed, irregularly dentate or denticulate. a 5. B. fasciculiflora 372 MERRILL. 8. Flowers in terminal or axillary small to large panicles or racemes. 4, Leaves more or less narrowed on both sides of the midrib toward the often subequilateral. base. 5. Leaves quite glabrous. 6. Leaves distinctly obliquely cordate at the base 6. B. ag sis 6. Leaves subobtuse or acute at the base, not obliquely cordate. 7. Leaves 5 to 8 em long. 8. Capsule equally 3-winged 7. B. brevipes 8. Capsule unequally 3-winged ...-....-------------------- 1 8. B. littleri 7. Leaves 10 to 15 em long. 8. Capsules nearly 2 em long ..........--------------------- 9. B. longistipula 8. Capsules less than 1.5 cm long ....-....-..-.-.-- 10. B. palawanensis 5. Leaves densely brown-setose or pubescent on the nerves on the lower surface. 6. Leaves subentire or obscurely undulate-lobed near the apex. ll. B. leptantha 6. Leaves distinctly angular-lobed or toothed. 7. Margins with few, short, coarse, triangular lobes... 12. B. weberi 7. Margins sharply toothed or sublobed, the teeth numerous, small or of medium size. 8. Leaves less than 2 em. wide 13. B. loheri 8. Leaves 3.5 to 6 em wide ‘ 14. B. jagori 4. Leaves not narrowed to the base which is always strongly cordate and inequilateral. ’ ' 5, Leaves deeply laciniately pinnatifid.....; 5. B. incisa 5. Leaves entire, toothed, or lobed. not laciniate. 6. Leaves prominently pubescent at least on ‘id nerves on the lower surface. 7. Leaves suborbicular or reniform «.......-.2:---i-.-------- 16. B. mearnsii 7. Leaves oblong. , 8. Capsule less than 1 em long —..----.--t----t------- 11. B. leytensis 8. Capsules 1.5 to 2.5 em long. 9. Inflorescence short, congested, 3 em long or less, the flowers subtended by large bracts 18. B. erispipila 9. Inflorescence lax, the bracts none or endl and early deciduous. 19. B. ss atl 6. Leaves glabrous or nearly. so, 7. Capsules 2 to 2.5 em long. 8. Staminate flowers small; leaves mottled ........ 20. B. leucosticta 8. Staminate flowers large; leaves not mottled... 21. B. _———* 7. Capsules less than 2 cm long. ' 8. Male flowers exceeding 2 cm in diameter. <9. Leaves 14 to 30 cm long; ataminate flowers 2: to 2.5 cm in © ' diameter: Tae : 22. B. halconensis 9. Leaves less than’ 10 cm a ong; male flowers 3 to 3.5 cm in diameter 23, B. merrittii ‘8. Male flowers less: no i ‘5.em. in diameter. . 9. Capsule about. 1.5 cm long.. 10. ee ee onmereuine or toothed, not Jobed. 24. B. contracta 10.. Lea ftinit yi lasepacky angularly Meer we B: quercifolia 9, Capsules. 10 t6°12 mm long. |" » es ee 10. Leaf-margins ciliate- dotivntate 22. “26. B. bolsteri 10. Leaf-margins not ciliate-denticulate............ 27. B. ramosit PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. 3738 4. Leaves not narrowed below, obliquely truncate or obtuse at the base, not cordate. 5. Leaves brown-setose or pubescent at least on the nerves on the lower surface. 6. Petioles 0.5 cm long; leaves setose only on the nerves. ; 28. B. cumingiana 6. Petioles 1 to 1.5 em long; leaves setose on all parts of the lower surface 29. B. rizalensis 5. Leaves glabrous or nearly so. 6. Leaves minutely and sparingly brown-furfuraceous on the lower surface; flowers vermillion 30. B. lenta 6. Leaves quite glabrous; flowers pink. 7. Capsules 2 em long, truncate. 31. B. subtruncata 7. Capsules less than 2 em long. 8. Staminate flowers 1 to 1.2 em in diameter; capsules more than 1.5 em long 32. B. everettii 8. Male flowers 2.4 em in diameter; capsules less than 1 em long. 33. B. malindangensis | Staminate flowers with 2 sepals and 2 petals; herbs with prostrate stems, terrestrial or growing on the trunks or branches of trees, rooting through- out their length and sending out scattered leaves and flower-scapes. § DIPLOCLINIUM. 3. Leaves peltate, rounded at the base, not at all cordate. . 4. Plant glabrous 34. B. hernandioides 4, Plant more or less densely villous with long, soft, brown hairs. 35. B. rufipila 3. Leaves mostly strongly inequilateral at the base, not at all peltate. 4. Capsules equally or subequally 3-winged. 5. Capsules exceeding 1 cm in length; plants with few to many long, soft, brown hairs. 6. Wings -of the capsules about 2 mm wide; leaves 5 cm long or less. 36. B. longovillosa 6. Wings of the capsules 4 to 6 mm wide; leaves about 15 cm long. a 37. B. longiscapa 5. Capsules se 1 em long or less. 6. Capsules rhomboidal or subrhomboidal in outline, acute at both ends or subtruncate, the wings ee oes acute or subacute. 7. Leaves broadly ovate to orbicular-ovate, slightly acuminate; capsules usually about 1.2 em wide... 38. B. nigritarum : 7. Leaves narrowly ovate, prominently acuminate; capsules about 1.5 em wide .... 89. B: acuminatissima ‘6, Capsules not rhomboidal in outline, retuse, rounded, or truncate at both ends, the wings not triangular-narrowed, rounded. 7. Leaves glabrous on both surfaces ; capsules about 1.5-cm wide. 8. Leaves ovate, slightly acuminate, the ~ “margins subentire : Spat ‘petioles 2 to 4 em long. ... 40. B. colorata 8. Leaves narrowly ‘ovate, “peintnently acuminate; petioles 8 to 18 em long. 9. Leaves very oblique, 7 7 to u em long.. 39. B. acuminatissima C50: Leaves only . dlightly aegis ann eo 10° ta 22 ty eat ion ne : Ph cathalosh tig — pee a 4 ros * A tity .peet F CTY: 5S weir sat x OSS : 314 : MERRILL. 7. Leaves pubescent on the nerves on the lower surface; capsules 10 to 12 mm wide. 8. Capsules suborbicular in outline, retuse at both ends, 8 to 10 mm long; internodes short -........-.----- Sisk 42. B. mindorensis 8. Capsules ellipsoid, rounded at both ends, 10 to 12 mm long; interhodes long ....-.-- 43 B. longinoda 4. Capsules unequally 3- rarely 5-winged, one wing always much larger than the other two. 5. Larger wing distinctly concave or cucullate; sepals somewhat ciliate outside. 6. Leaves ovate, distinctly acuminate; capsule 3-winged. 44, B. anisoptera 6. Leaves orbicular or suborbicular, rounded or with a very short acumen; capsule 5-winged .......-----.--------------- 45. B. suborbiculata 5. Wings all flat; sepals glabrous. 6. Petioles, peduncles, and leaves with scattered, fimbriate-ciliate paleae; wings of the capsules acute or subacute. 7. Capsules about 3 cm wide 46. B. oxysperma 7. Capsules about 12 mm wide : 47. B. calcicola 6, Indumentum, if any, of simple hairs; wings of the capsules rounded, rarely acute. £ 7. Capsules about 1 em long. : 8. Whole plant glabrous or nearly s0; capsules about 1.5 cm 5 PPE GS a Ee OCIS SPE AEE pea ce PW a ER 48. B. fenicis 8. Leaves more or less brown-ciliate, especially on the margins: capsules about 2 cm Wide ----..----------------~ 49. B. copelandii 7. Capsules exceeding 1.2 em in length. 8, Leaves more or less hairy on both surfaces. 3 9. Leaves small, entire, less than 5 cm long..------ 50. B. parva 9. Leaves medium or ample, 10 to 20 cm long, more or less toothed or shallowly lobed. 10. Leaves medium; capsules 1.4 em wide...... 51. B. klemmei 10. Leaves ample; capsules larger. 11. Capsules 1.8 to 2.3 em wide...........-..- 52. B. luzonensis 11. Capsules 3 to 3.5 em wide.........- 53. B. vanoverberghii 8. Leaves glabrous on the upper surface. 9. Leaves entire; capsules 1 to 1.3 em wide.. 54. B. trichochetla 9. Leaves more or less toothed or ob ly and shallowly lobed; capsules 1.6 to 2 cm wWide.......-.--------------- 55. B. manillensis 8. Leaves glabrous on both surfaces, entire.......--- 56. B. alvarezii 3. Leaves subequilateral, base acute, truncate, or rounded, never peltate or cordate; scandent along the trunks of trees. ' 4. Petioles 5 to 7 cm long; leaves truncate or rounded at the base, 2.5 Pl ges cat 1c eae ROomangee waiNeems eeticasibtene Mecnen ae 2 eee SAP 57. B. gracilipes 4. Petioles 1.5 to 2 em long; leaves up to 9 cm in length; capsules about 1.5 em long 58. B. lagunensis 4. Petioles, at least in the typical form, less than, 1 em long; leaves 5 em long or less; capsules about 1.2 em wide... 59. B. aequata — § SPHENANTHERA. 1. Begonia pseudo-lateralis Warb. in Perk. Frag. Fl. Philip. (1904) 51. Begonia salaziensis Gaudich. var. calleryana A. DC. Prodr 15* (1864) 408. Begonia aptera Roxb var. calleryana F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 99. * ‘PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. 375 Luzon, Province of Cagayan, Pamplona, Bur. Sci. 7432 Ramos: Benguet Subprovince, Sablan, Bur, Sci. 12661 Fénix: Province of Pampanga, Mount Abu, Bur. Sci. 2008 Foxworthy: Province of Laguna, Calauan, Callery in Herb. Mus. Paris. (type of Begonia salaziensis var. calleryana A, DC.) ; Province of Bataan, Lamao River, Williams 532: Province of Tayabas, Atimonan, Merrill 4009. PoutLo, Bur. Sci. 6903 Robinson. Mrnvoro, Alag River, Merrill 991; Mount Burburangan, For. Bur. 8521 Merritt. Mtnpanao, Province of Surigao, »Bolster 247, Allen 159; District of Lanao, Mrs, Clemens s. n. Jouo, Mount Dajo, Merrill 5829. The only species of the section known from the Philippines, extending from northern Luzon to Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago. According to Warburg it is closely allied to Begonia heteroclinis Miq., of northeastern Celebes. I am indebted to Dr. F. Gagnepain of the Museum of Natural History, Paris, for a sketch of the type specimen of Begonia salaziensis var. calleryana; the specimen is fragmentary, but is unquestionably identical with Warburg’s Begonia pseudo-lateralis. Endemic. ; § PETERMANNIA. 2. Begonia robinsonii sp. nov. Suffruticosa, erecta, circiter 80 cm alta, pauce ramosa, partibus junior- ibus subtus foliis ad nervos plus minus breviter brunneo-pubescentibus ; foliis valde inequilateralibus, basi oblique cordatis, apice acuminatis, margine denticulatis et leviter, distanter, breviter lobatis, palmatinerviis ; inflorescentiis axillaribus, quam petiolus multo brevioribus; floribus in apice pedunculorum solitariis vel paucis, bracteis bracteolisque suffultis ; capsulis circiter 2 cm longis. A suffrutescent, erect, slightly branched plant about 80 em high. Stems terete, glabrous, not striate, 5 to 7 mm in diameter, dark-brown or nearly black when dry, the younger parts and petioles rather densely pubescent with dark-brown, short hairs. Leaves membranaceous or sub- membranaceous inequilaterally and obliquely oblong or oblong-ovate, 9 to 13 em long, 4 to 7 em wide, the base strongly obliquely cordate, the broader lobe rounded, 2 to 3 em wide, the narrower one obtuse, less than 1 em wide, the apex rather abruptly and slenderly acuminate, the acumen 1 to 1.5 cm long, the margins irregularly dentate, and sometimes with from one to three, ovate, acute lobes, but these lobes never more than 1 em deep, the upper surface glabrous, dark-brown, somewhat shining, the lower much paler, the nerves brown-pubescent, the whole surface covered with numerous, small, whitish, lepidote-like spots; nerves palmately arranged, about 12, distinct, mostly forked, brown, much darker than the other parts of the lower surface; petioles pubescent, about 2.cm long; stipules oblong, 1.5 cm long or less, abruptly apiculate-acuminate, brown, membranaceous, glabrous or nearly so. Inflorescence, both stam- inate and pistillate, axillary, much shorter than the petioles, more or less pubescent. Staminate flowers, one to three, fasciculately arranged at the end of the short, solitary, about 4 mm long peduncle, each subtended 105968——2 ; see a ae 376 MERRILL. by about two bracts similar in shape, size and texture to the stipules, and each flower subtended by a pair of smaller bracteoles; pedicels brown-pubescent, 4 mm long. Sepals 2, elliptic-ovate, rounded, 10- nerved, reticulate, in bud but nearly mature, about 8 mm long. Stamens about 25; anthers 1 mm long. Pistillate flowers unknown. Capsules ' obovate in outline, truncate, base acute, about 1 cm long, 1.8 cm wide, glabrous, 3-celled, the placentas bipartite, 3-winged, the wings in their upper portions about 0.7 mm wide. Luzon, Province of Camarines, Maagnas, Bur. Sci. 6340 Robinson, August 28, 1908. A species characterized by its short-peduncled, fascicled or solitary flowers, and by its comparatively large capsules. 3. Begonia ciliifera sp. nov. Species B. fasciculiflorae valde affinis, differt omnibus partibus pilis brunneis longis ciliiformibus instructis, foliisque paullo minoribus. An erect or ascending, somewhat branched, and apparently suffru- tescent plant, all parts supplied with long, brown, spreading cilia-like hairs. Branches terete or angled, brown, striate, rather densely ciliate. Leaves oblong-obovate, membranaceous, shortly petioled, 6 to 11 cm long, 2 to 4 em wide, brown or reddish-brown when dry, somewhat shining, much paler. beneath, the apex rather sharply acuminate, the base gradually narrowed, somewhat inequilateral, obtuse, the margins distantly and rather coarsely toothed, the teeth acute, 4 mm long or less; the upper surface with scattered, long, brown hairs, the lower surface more densely ciliate, but here only on the nerves, and also densely covered with small, white, lepidote-like spots; petioles 3 mm long or less, densely ciliate; nerves about 5 on each side of the midrib, ascending, straight, mostly forked, the reticulations lax, distinct; stipules ciliate, brown, lanceolate, strongly acuminate, about 1 cm long. Staminate flowers axillary, solitary or in very few-flowered fascicles, similar to those of B. fasciculiflora, each pedicel subtended by several linear-lanceolate, acu- minate, brown bracteoles. ; MINDANAO, District of Zamboanga, Port Banga, For. Bur. 9318 Whitford & Hutchinson, January, 1908, in canyons, altitude about 20 m. Both this and Begonia fasciculiflora are quite distinct from B. mindanaensis Warb., which also has axillary fascicled flowers. , 4, Begonia mindanaensis Warb. in Perk. Frag. Fl. Philip. (1904) 55. Minpanao, District of Davao, Mount Dagatpan, Warburg 14633, type in herb. Berol.!; Todaya, Copeland 1246, April, 1904: Province of Surigao, Bolster 341, April, 1906: Butuan subprovince, Weber 1211, Merrill 7310. District of Zam- boanga, Sax River, Williams 2103, February, 1905. 5. Begonia fasciculiflora sp. nov. Suffruticosa, erecta, 0.6 ad 1.2 m alta, vix vel pauce ramosa, leviter brunneo-pubescens; foliis breviter petiolatis, inaequilateraliter oblongo- PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. Stl obovatis vel late oblanceolato-obovatis, acuminatis, leviter irregulariter denticulatis, vix lobatis, basi angustatis, penninerviis; floribus parvis, breviter pedicellatis, in fasciculis axillaribus dense dispositis, pedicellis bracteolis numerosis suffultis. A suffrutescent erect plant 0.6 to 1.2 m high, not or but slightly branched, the lowermost nodes root-bearing. Stems dark-brown, terete, _ rather stout, about 6 mm in diameter below, longitudinally striate, pubescent with short, stout, dark-brown, more or less scattered hairs. Leaves alternate, membranaceous, inequilaterally oblong-obovate to broadly oblong-oblanceolate, 13 to 18 cm long, 5 to 7 em wide, the apex shortly but sharply acuminate, the base narrowed, wider on one side of the midrib then on the other, the widest side narrowed to the abruptly rounded base, the other side acute, the margins distantly and irregularly, and usually doubly denticulate, scarcely lobed, the upper surface quite glabrous, the lower with scattered, short, brown hairs on the nerves, and the whole lower surface densely covered with small, whitish, sublepidote spots; petiole 5 mm long or less; midrib prominent, the lateral nerves about 7 on each side of the midrib, ascending, nearly straight, most of them forked; stipules brown, pubescent, lanceolate, prominently acum- inate, 1 to 1.5 cm long. Flowers fascicled in the axils of the leaves, numerous, crowded, the pedicels about 4 mm long, each subtended by a whorl of about 5, lanceolate, acuminate, ciliate, brown bracteoles 2 to 3 mm long. Staminate flowers: Sepals 2, ovate, obtuse, about 8-nerved, just before anthesis about 6 mm long. Stamens about 30; anthers ellip- soid or oblong-ellipsoid, retuse, about 1 mm long, the filaments about as long as the anthers. Pistillate flowers not seen. Capsules glabrous, shortly peduncled or subsessile, obovate in outline, about 1 cm long, truncate, base acute, 3-celled, the placentae forked, 3-winged, the wings 2 to 3 mm wide. : Mrypanao, District of Zamboanga, Port Banga, For. Bur. 9248, 9316 (type) Whitford & Hutchii ee ee ber 26, 1907, and January 13, 1908, in canyons, 5 to 30 m above sea level. A species well characterized by its dense, fascicled inflorescence, in this character approaching Begonia fasciculata Jack of Sumatra, but otherwise ap- parently not closely allied to that species. 6. Begonia agusanensis sp. nov. Herba erecta, simplex vel parce ramosa, 25 ad 40 cm alta, ramulis petiolisque junioribus sparse setosis; foliis breviter petiolatis, inaequia- teraliter oblongo-obovatis, in siccitate membranaceis, glabris, usque ad 13 cm longis, basi angustatis, anguste oblique cordatis, margine in partibus superioribus plus minus lobato-dentatis, apice acuminatis ; petiolo 3 ad 10 mm longo; paniculis in axillis superioribus, 3 ad 5 cm longis, ramulis tenuibus; floribus masculinis parvis, sepalis 2, ovatis, petalis 2, quam sepala multo angustioribus; capsulis aequaliter 3-alatis, 10 mm_ longis. 378 MERRILL. An erect herb 25 to 40 em high, simple or sparingly branched. Young stems and petioles with few, brown, setose hairs. Leaves membranaceous, glabrous, inequilaterally oblong-obovate, 5 to 13 cm long, gradually narrowed from about the middle to the narrow and obliquely cordate base, both basal lobes rounded, one much wider than the other, the margins _ in the upper one-half or two-thirds more or less dentate-lobed or toothed, apex acuminate; basal nerves about 7, the outer ones short, the inner ones and those leaving the midrib above the base sharply ascending ; petioles 3 to 10 mm long; stipules lanceolate, acurninate, about 5 mm long. Panicles in the uppermost axils, 3 to 5 cm long, slender, dichotom- ously branched, the lowermost flowers female, the upper ones male, the bracts very small. Male flowers pink. Sepals 2, ovate, obtuse, about 5 mm long and 4 mm wide. Petals 2, nearly as long as the sepals but less than one-half as wide. Anthers 20 or less. Female flowers not seen, Capsules about 1 em long, subrhomboid in outline, equally 3- winged, the wings about 5 mm wide. Mrinpanao, Butuan Subprovince, Agusan River near Waloe, on banks along small streams in forests, altitude about 50 m, Merrill 7312 (type), October 2, 1910; Talacogon, Weber 1209, July, 1911. 7. Begonia brevipes sp. nov. Herba erecta, parce ramosa, circiter 30 cm alta; petiolis ramis ramu- lisque sparse brunneo-setosis; foliis inaequilateraliter oblongis vel oblongo-ovatis, usque ad % cm longis, apice acuminatis, basi angustatis, acutis, vel uno latere angustatis, acutis, altero plus minus rotundatis, vix cordatis, margine plus minus lobato-dentatis denticulatisque ; petiolo vix 5 mm longo; floribus masculinis parvis, sepalis 2, petalis nullis, femineis 5-meris; capsulis 12 mm longis, truncatis, aequaliter 3-alatis. An erect slightly branched herb about 30 cm high, the petioles, branches and branchlets sorhewhat brown-setose. Leaves membranaceous, 5 to 7 em long, 2 to 3.5 cm wide, inequilaterally oblong or oblong-ovate, the apex rather slenderly acuminate, the base narrowed and acute on both sides, or acute on one side and wider and rounded on the other, the margins distinctly and irregularly lobed-dentate, and more or less denti- culate; nerves distinct beneath, brown, very slightly setose; petioles 2 to 4 mm long; stipules lanceolate, acuminate, about 5 mm long. Stam- inate and pistillate flowers in different inflorescences on the same plant, both in the uppermost axils. Staminate inflorescence 3 to 4 cm long, slightly branched, the flowers pink, their pedicels 5 to 6 mm long. Sepals 2, broadly ovate, about 5 mm long. Petals none. Stamens about 16; anthers narrowly obovoid, 1 mm long. Pistillate inflorescence 3-flowered, the peduncle 1.5 em long, the pedicels slender, 1 to 1.5 cm long. Perianth-segments 5, narrowly obovate, 5 to 6 mm long. Styles united for the lower 1 mm, the arms about 2 mm long, each cleft near the PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. 379 apex, the stigmas spirally arranged. Capsules turbinate, truncate, base rounded, about 12 mm long, 1.5 mm wide, the wings equal, the upper outer corners acute; placentae 2-partite. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, Pamplona, Bur, Sei. 7431 Ramos, March, 1909, in forests. A species manifestly allied to Begonia cumingiana A. DC., but with smaller, more distinctly lobed leaves, and with the staminate and pistillate flowers in separate inflorescences. 8. Begonia littleri sp. nov. Species B. longistipulae affinis et similis, differt foliis brevioribus, vix 8 cm longis, capsulis multo minoribus, inaequaliter 3-alatis. An erect, herbaceous or slighty suffrutescent and slightly branched, glabrous plant 50 cm high or less, the branches terete, dark-brown. Leaves inequilateral, oblong to oblong-ovate, membranaceous, straight or slightly faleate 5 to 7 em long, 1.5 to 3 em wide, the base narrowed, acute, obtuse, or slightly rounded, inequilateral, not at all cordate, the apex rather sharply and slenderly acuminate, the margins, especially in the upper half, distinctly lobed-dentate, the teeth sharp, scattered, ir- regular; petioles 4 to 10 mm long; stipules brown, membranaceous, lanceolate, acuminate, about 1.3 em long. Panicles in the upper axils, 5 em long or less, the flowers apparently pistillate, the upper ones more numerous, staminate, the sepals of the staminate flowers 2, orbicular, less than 5 mm long, white, the petals none. Capsules about 1 cm long, 1.5 em wide, truncate, the base rounded, 3-winged, one wing about 5 mm wide, the other two considerably narrower, all rounded. Placentae 2-partite. BASILAN, Isabela, along banks of streams at an altitude of about 90 m, DeVore & Hoover 94, April, 1903, in flower (type), Bur. Sci. 11512 Robinson, June, 1910, in fruit. “ A species with much the general appearance of Begonia longistipula Merr., but differing especially in its smaller leaves and much smaller capsules. Named in honor of Capt. C. A. Littler, of whose party Dr. Robinson was a ber at the time fruiting specimens of the plant were collected. 9. Begonia longistipula sp. nov. Herba erecta, ramosa, glabra; foliis lanceolatis, leviter inaequilatera- libus, rectis vel leviter falcatis, membranaceis, apice longe acuminatis, basi angustatis, acutis vel obtusis, vix cordatis, margine irregulariter leviter late dentato-lobatis; stipulis lanceolatis, membranaceis, deciduis, 1.5 ad 2 cm longis; inflorescentiis masculinis terminalibus, diffusis, 6 ad 9 em longis, floribus circiter 1 em diametro; capsulis circiter 1.8 cm longis, aequaliter 3-alatis, apice truncatis, basi acutis. An erect, branched, glabrous herb, the stems reddish-brown when dry. Leaves thinly membranaceous, lanceolate or narrowly oblong-lanceolate, 10 to 15 cm long, 2 to 5 em wide, somewhat shining when dry, greenish, 380 MERRILL. sometimes tinged with red or purple, straight or somewhat falcate, slightly inequilateral, the base narrowed, acute or obtuse, not cordate, the apex rather slenderly long-acuminate, the acumen denticulate, margins distantly, irregularly dentate-lobed, the lobes small, broad, acute, the base 4- to 6-plinerved, the nerves ascending, the lateral ones above the basal nerves distant, 2 or 3 on each side of the midrib, ascending ; petioles rather slender, about 5 mm long; stipules brown, membranaceous, deciduous, lanceolate, 1.5 to 2 cm long, the apex ciliate-acuminate. Stam- inate inflorescence terminal, paniculate, rather diffuse, 6 to 9 cm long, the flowers small, pink, rather numerous, their pedicels 1 to 2 mm long. Sepals 2, ovate, obtuse or subacute, 5 mm long, faintly 7-nerved. Petals none. Stamens about 30, the anthers 1 mm long, the filaments much shorter. Bracts and bracteoles lanceolate, membranaceous, brown, acum- inate, deciduous, the former about 8 mm long, the latter 1.5 mm in length. Pistillate flowers not seen, apparently axillary at the base of the staminate inflorescence. Capsules solitary, nodding, obovoid in outline, their pedicels about 1 cm long, in the upper leaf-axils and at the base of the staminate inflorescences, equally 3-winged, the apex truncate, the base acute, about 1.8 cm long and wide, the wings about 5 mm wide. Placentae 2-partite. Mrxpanao, Province of Surigao, near Surigao, Bolster 248, February and April, 1906, altitude about 125 m, said by the collector to be common. A species manifestly allied to Begonia contracta Warb., but readily distin- guished from it and other allied forms by its leaves being more or less narrowed and acute or obtuse at the base, not at all cordate. 10. Begonia palawanensis sp. nov. Herba erecta, plus minus ramosa, usque ad 80 cm alta, ramulis sparse setosis; foliis breviter petiolatis, membranaceis, usque ad 14 cm longis, * inaequilateraliter oblongis vel oblongo-ovatis, base abrupte angustatis, acutis vel obtusis, apice longe acuminatis, margine in parte superioribus: lobato-dentatis denticulatisque; paniculis in axillis superioribus, 3 ad 5 cm longis; floribus masculinis roseis, sepalis 2, ovatis, circiter 5 mm Jongis; petalis nullis; capsulis 1.5 em longis, aequaliter 3-alatis, apice truncatis, basi acutis vel subrotundatis. d An erect branched herb glabrous except for the branches which bear few, scattered, brown, setose hairs. Leaves short-petioled, membranace- ous, inequilateral, oblong to oblong-ovate or oblong-obovate, 8 to 14 cm long, 3 to 6 em wide, base narrowed from below the middle, acute or obtuse, apex prominently acuminate, margins above the middle somewhat lobed-dentate, with interspersed smaller sharp teeth, the base 3- or 5- plinerved, nerves ascending, the nerves above the basal ones 2 or 3 on each side; petioles 5 to 12 mm long; stipules membranaceous, oblong PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. 381 to oblong-lanceolate, 12 to 15 mm long, flagellate-acuminate. Panicles in the uppermost axils, 3 to 5 em long, slender, the lower few flowers female, the upper more numerous, male. Male flowers pink. Sepals ovate, obtuse, about 5 mm long. Petals none. Capsule obovoid, about 15 mm long, and wide, including the 3 equal or subequal wings, apex truncate, base rounded or acute. PALAWAN, Napsahan, on the west coast, on hanks of small streams in forests about 4 m above sea level, Merrill 7332, September 19, 1910. 11, Begonia leptantha C. B. Rob. supra 211. POoLILLo, Bur. Sci. 6857, 6944 Robinson, August, 1909, Bur. Sci. 10322 McGregor, September, 1909. Luzon, Province of Tayabas, Sinaloan Trail, Bur. Sci. 9474- Robinson, September, 1909. Endemic. 12. Begonia weberi sp. nov. Suffruticosa, erecta, simplex vel parce ramosa, usque ad 50 cm alta, omnibus partibus plus minus brunneo-ciliatis; foliis inaequilateraliter obovatis vel anguste obovatis, base angustatis oblique leviter cordatis, apice acutis, margine grosse, irregulariter sinuato-lobatis, paniculis in axillis superioribus, brevibus, paucifloris, bracteis prominentibus instruc- tis ; floribus masculinis sepalis 2, ovatis, 9 ad 10 mm longis, petalis nullis; capsulis obovatis, circiter 12 mm longis, aequaliter 3-alatis. An erect suffrutescent plant 30 to 50 em high, simple or sparingly branched, all parts more or less ciliate with long brown hairs, the younger parts densely so. Leaves obovate or narrowly obovate, 6 to 10 em long, 3.5 to 6 em wide obliquely inequilateral, narrowed to the obliquely and slightly cordate base, the broader side rounded, the other acute, apex acute, margins irregularly and coarsely sinuate-lobed, the lobes acute, the sinuses broad, shallow, both surfaces ciliate-setose, the nerves on the lower surface densely so; basal nerves about 5, the outer ones very short, the lateral nerves above the basal ones 3 or 4 on each side of the midrib; petioles 5 to 12 mm long, densely ciliate-setose with brown hairs; stipules oblong-ovate, acuminate, ciliate, about 8 mm long. Panicles narrow, few-flowered, about 3 cm long, ciliate, solitary in the upper axils, the lower one or two flowers female, the upper ones male; bracts prominent, oblong-ovate, acuminate, somewhat ciliate, membranaceous, 8 to 10 mm long, the upper ones smaller than the lower ones. Male flowers apparently pink, their pedicels slender. Sepals 2, ovate, obtuse, 9to 10mm long. Petalsnone. Stamens about 25. Capsules, including the wings, obovate, about 12 mm long, 15 mm wide, equally 3-winged, broadly acute or subtruncate at the apex, narrowed below to the some- what rounded base, more or less ciliate with brown hairs. Minpanao, Butuan Subprovince, Mount Hilong-hilong, Weber 1210, March, 1911, rocky slopes in ravines, altitude about 450 m. 382 MERRILL. 13. Begonia loheri sp. nov. Erecta, parce ramosa, ramulis, petiolis, subtus foliisque ad nervos prunneo-setosis ; foliis oblongis, inaequilateralibus, basin versus admodum angustatis, subsessilibus vel breviter petiolatis, 2 ad 5 cm longis, apice acuminatis, basi oblique leviter subcordatis, margine irregulariter lobatis et setoso-denticulatis; inflorescentiis in axillis superioribus, 1.5 ad 4 cm longis, angustis, paucifloris, parce ciliatis, bracteis prominentibus instruc- tis; floribus masculinis sepalis 2, suborbicularibus, circiter 7 mm longis, basi cordatis ; capsulis circiter 1 cm longis, ut videtur aequaliter 3-alatis. An erect, somewhat branched plant about 20 cm high, the lower parts of the stems often prostrate and rooting, the branches, petioles, and leaves on the nerves on the lower surface distinctly brown-setose. Leaves oblong, 2 to 5 cm long, 0.7 to 2 cm wide, somewhat narrowed towards the inequilaterally and slightly cordate base, apex acuminate, margins irregularly lobed towards the apex, otherwise dentate and setose-denti-. culate; basal nerves about 6, the outer ones very short, those above the basal ones about 4 on each side of the midrib; petioles 3 mm long or less, densely brown-setose; stipules ciliate, obliquely oblong-ovate, ac- uminate, about 8 mm long. Panicles in the uppermost axils, solitary, narrow, few-flowered, slightly ciliate; bracts oblong-ovate, acuminate, membranaceous, about 6 mm long. Male flowers apparently pink. Sepals suborbicular, rounded, base cordate, about 7 mm _ long. Petals none. Stamens about 18. Capsules (every old) about 1 cm long, apparently truncate and equally 3-winged. Luzon, Province of Rizal, Angilog, Loher 6090, 6098, March 15, 1906. 14, Begonia jagori Warb. in Perk. Frag. Fl. Philip. (1904) 54. Luzon, without definite locality, Jagor 889, 890, in herb. Berol. Mrnporo, Mount Halcon, Merrill 5685 (formerly reported as B. incisa +A. DC.) ; halo River, For. Bur. 12049 Merritt ; Baco River, Merrill 148}; south of Lake Naujan, For. Bur. 6746 Merritt ; without definite locality, For. Bur. 8712 Merritt. Endemic. Dr. I. Urban, of the Berlin Herbarium, has kindly supplied the herbarium of the Bureau of Science with a duplicate specimen of one of Jagor’s numbers. Begonia Jagori Warb. is apparently closely allied to B. incisa A. DC., but the typical form is distinguished by its only toothed, not lobed leaves. The Mindoro material cited above has rather deeply lobed leaves, and some forms rather _ closely approach Begonia incisa A. DC. Endemie. 15. Begonia incisa A. DC. in Ann. Sci. Nat. IV 11 (1859) 129. Prodr. 15* (1864) 321; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 99. Luzon, Province of Tayabas, Atimonan, Merrill 3994, March, 1905: Province of Zambales, Bur. Sci. 4993 p. p. Ramos: Province of Sorsogon, specimen ex herb. Bonpland in the Berlin Herbarium, probably cotype. Necros, Gimagaan River, Whitford 1582, For. Bur. 4253 Everett, March, May, 1906. ee A most characteristic endemic species, well characterized by its deeply incised leaves. The type is in the Boissier Hermarium, the collector and the definite locality, other than “Philippines,” not being given; A. De Candolle surmises Née PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. 383 to have been the collector, and it probably was collected either by Née or by Haenke. It is known to the Visayans in Negros as bituca or malangpang. Endemic. s 16. Begonia mearnsii sp. nov. Herba suberecta, omnibus partibus, praesertim junioribus, dense cris- pato-fulvo-villosis; foliis suborbicularibus vel subreniformibus, usque ad 10 em longis, breviter acuminatis, leviter lobatis, basi circiter 7-nerviis, inaequilateraliter cordatis; inflorescentiis valde bracteatis; floribus mas- culinis longe pedicellatis, circiter 1.5 cm diametro. An herbaceous or suffrutescent plant, suberect, or the older parts of the stems more or less decumbent and rooting at the nodes. Stems brown, more or less suleate when dry, more or less ciliate with crisped, often matted, long, brown hairs, all younger parts of the plant densely so, the inflorescence, petioles, and fruits with similar hairs. Leaves sub- orbicular or subreniform, up to 10 cm long and nearly as wide, or sometimes wider than long, membranaceous, the upper surface brown, with very few, scattered, short hairs, the lower surface much paler, rather strongly brown-pubescent on the nerves, the entire lower surface densely covered with small, whitish, sublepidote spots, the base shallowly and inequilaterally cordate, the apex shortly and rather broadly ac- uminate, the margins irregularly and shallowly lobed, the sinuses shal- low, broad, none of them exceeding 1 cm in depth ; basal nerves about 7, distinct, some of them forked above; petioleg 3 to 9 em long; stipules membranaceous, oblong, about 1 cm long. Staminate and _pistillate inflorescences similar, few-flowered, terminal, 5 to 12 cm long, long- peduncled, each subtended by a terminal leaf and a pair of bracts, the bracts about 1 cm long, ovate or oblong-ovate, densely brown-pubescent, the flowers crowded near the apex of the peduncle, subtended by several, more or less reniform, ciliate, pubescent, somewhat imbricate bracteoles nearly 1 cm in length. Staminate flowers: Pedicels slender, solitary, about 1.5 em long. Sepals 2, orbicular-obovate, about 8 mm in dia- meter, equilateral, rounded, about ?-nerved, the back with few, scattered, stout, brown hairs on the nerves. Petals none. Stamens about 16, alternately arranged along the somewhat elongated torus, the filaments less than 1 mm long, the anthers narrowly oblong-obovoid, rounded or retuse, about 1.5 mm long. Pistillaté flowers: Sepals 5, imequi- laterally obovate, about 9 mm long, 7 to 8 mm wide, nerved and pubes- cent like those of the male flowers. Ovary densely brown-pubescent, 3- celled, 3-winged; styles 3, free or nearly so, about 3 mm long, divar- icately forked. Young fruit about 8 mm long, 3-winged, pubescent. Mrnpanao, Mount Malindang, For. Bur. 4749 Mearns & Hutchinson, May, 1906, altitude about 1,200 m. ie A species manifestly referable to the section Peter ia, differing from all the species of that group known to me in its dense, brown indumentum. Ld 384 _ MERRILL. 17. B. leytensis Elm. Leafl. Philip. Bot. 2 (1910) 739. Herba erecta, parce ramosa, 20 ad 50 cm alta, parce ciliata; foliis membranaceis, oblongis, 5 ad 10 cm longis, acuminatis, inaequilateribus, basi valde oblique cordatis, vix angustatis, margine lobato-dentatis, et ciliato-denticulatis; inflorescentiis paucifloris, circiter 2 cm longis; flor- ibus masculinis sepalis 2, oblongis vel subrotundatis, 7.5 mm_ longis, petalis nullis; capsulis obovatis, truncatis, base rotundatis, circiter 1 cm longis, 12 ad 15 mm latis, aequaliter 3-alatis. Leyre, Palo, Elmer 7255, January, 1906 (type number) , in shaded ravines along streams at an altitude of about 230 m. Endemic, 18. Begonia crispipila Elm. Leafl. Philip. Bot. 2 (1910) 737. Suffruticosa, erecta, plus minus ramosa, ramulis parce brunneo-setosis ; foliis membranaceis, oblongo-ovatis, 10 ad 20 cm longis, inaequilateralibus, basi vix angustatis, valde oblique cordatis uno latere angustis, subacutis, altero latissime rotundatis, apice acuminatis, margine distincte dentato- lobatis denticulisque, utrinque vel subtus parce setosis; inflorescentiis axillaribus, angustis, vix 3 cm longis, bracteis numerosis magnis brunneis ovatis persistentibus instructis; floribus masculinis circiter 1.5 em diame- tro, sepalis 2, petalis nullis; capsulis suborbicularibus, utrinque rotun- datis, circiter 13 mm longis, aequaliter 3-alatis. Luzon, Province of Benguet, Sablan, Elmer 6149, April, 1904, Bur. Sci. 12602 Fénix, November, 1910; near Baguio, altitude about 1,500 m, Elmer 8687, March, 1907 (type number), ‘aon Pl. 827 Merrill, May, 1911. Endemic. 19. Begonia cumingii A. Gray Bot. Wilkes U. 8. Explor. Exped. (1854) 658; Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 3 (1908) Bot. 84, pl. 3. Begonia philippinensis A. DC. Prodr. 16+ (1864) 320; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 98; Vid. Phan. Cuming. Philip. (1885) 116, Rev. Pl. Vase. Filip. (1886) 143, : Luzon, without definite locality, Cuming 1897, Lobb, in Herb. Kew., probably both from Mount Banajao; Provinces of Laguna and Tayabas, Mount Banajao, Wilkes Bapedition, type in U. S.. National Herbarium, For. Bur. 885 Klemme, June, 1904, Bur. Sci. 2419 Foaworthy, March, 1907, Bur. Sci. 6068 Robinson, March, 1908: Mount Maquiling, Merrill 6305, February, 1909, For. Bur. 15341 Tamesis, November, 1909. A very characteristic endemic species, definitely known only from the mountains of the Provinces of Laguna and Tayabas, Luzon. As to the specific name ingii it is retained ‘in spite of ite fact that A. DeCandolle coined a new name, philippinensis, for the species, on unt of the fact that Klotzsch had at about the same time published Petermannia cumingiana which De Candolle transferred to Begonia as B. cwmingiana. While the Vienna Code recommends that in the future the use of both the genitive and adjectival forms of the same name for two different species of the same genus be avoided, no definite ruling is made as to the treatment or validity of such names that have already been are the inference is that both are valid. e PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. 385 If in the future it is definitely decided that the names ingit and ingiana can not be retained for the two distinct species, then the latter is the one that will need a new name, for Begonia cumingii A. Gray antedates by 10 years B. cumingiana A. DC. (as Begonia), although there is no doubt but that Petermannia cumingiana Klotzsch was published a few months earlier than Begonia cumingii A. Gray. The use of. the name under Petermannia, however, has no bearing on the validity or nonvalidity of the specific name under Begonia. 20. Begonia leucosticta Warb. in Perk. Frag. Fl. Philip. (1904) 55. Luzon, Province of Isabela, Warburg 12004, type in herb. Berol.: Province of Benguet, Topping 92, January, 1902. Bucas~- (northeast of Mindanao), Merrill 5274, October, 1906. Endemic. 21. Begonia negrosensis Elm. Leafl. Philip. Bot. 2 (1910) 736. Suffruticosa, erecta, ramosa, subglabra, 2 ad 3 m alta, caulibus usque ad 2.5 cm crassis; foliis 10 ad 20 cm longis, ovato-oblongis, valde inaequilateralibus, basi valde oblique cordatis, apice acuminatis, mar- gine denticulatis, subtus ad nervos parce strigosis vel ubique glabris; inflorescentiis usque ad 7 cm longis, paniculatis; floribus masculinis sepalis 2, orbicularibus, circiter 1.5 cm diametro, petalis nullis; cap- sulis triangulari-obovatis, 2 ad 2.3 cm longis, 3 ad 4 cm latis, apice truncatis, base acutis vel rotundatis. Negros, Cuernos Mountains, Zlmer 9903 (type number), April, 1908; Canlaon Voleano, Merrill 7024, April, 1910, For. Bur, 13666 Curran, September, 1909. Endemic. 22. Begonia halconensis sp. nov. Herba erecta parce ramosa, glabra, circiter 1 m alta; foliis chartaceis vel submembranaceis, usque ad 20 cm longis, oblique oblongis vel ob- longo-ovatis, valde tenuiter acute acuminatis, margine distanter dentatis et setosis, basi oblique cordatis, stipulis 1.5 ad 2 cm longis; inflores- centiis axillaribus, paucifloris, 3 ad 4 cm longis; floribus ¢ circiter 2.5 cm diametro; capsulis turbinatis, apice truncatis, basi acutis, 2 ad 2.5 cm latis, inaequaliter 3-alatis. A stout, erect, glabrous, slightly branched herb about 1 m high, the stems near the base about 2 cm in diameter. Leaves chartaceous or submembranaceous inequilaterally oblong or ovate-oblong, 14 to 20 ‘em long, 6 to 8 em wide, somewhat shining when dry, slightly paler beneath, not lobed, the apex long and slenderly sharp-acuminate, the base strongly obliquely cordate, the lower lobe very broad, rounded, the upper one much narrower, rounded to subacute, the margins distantly and irregularly dentate and with intermixed, rather soft, straight or curved, setae-like teeth, similar ones also scattered on the more pro- ~ minent nerves on the lower surface; basal nerves about 7, the primary lateral ones above the base 2 or 3 on each side of the midrib; petioles 386 MERRILL. 2.5 to 4 em long; stipules oblong-lanceolate, membranaceous, brown, 1.5 to 2 cm long, oblong-lanceolate, the apex prominently setose acum- inate. Inflorescence axillary, few-flowered, 3 to 4 cm long, the staminate and pistillate flowers white, apparently in different inflorescences on the same plant, the peduncles less than 1 cm long. Staminate flowers: Pedicels slender, 1.5 cm long. Sepals 2, elliptic-ovate, about 12 mm long, 10 mm wide. Petals similar but smaller, about 10 mm long and 7 mm wide. Stamens about 60; anthers oblong or narrowly oblong- obovoid, 2.5 mm long; filaments somewhat shorter. Pistillate flowers: Bracteoles narrowly lanceolate, somewhat boat-shaped, about 1 em long. Sepals 2, obovate, rounded, 12 mm long, 10 mm wide, the petals apparently 2, similar. Styles 3.5 mm long, free nearly to the base, the stigmas spiral. Capsule inequally 3-winged, turbinate, the apex trun- cate, the base acute or obtuse, 1.5 em long, 2 to 2.5 em wide, one wing nearly 1 cm wide, the other two one-half as wide. Mrnvoro, Mount Halcon, on steep, damp, forested slopes at an altitude 1,100 to 1,800 m, Merrill 5515 (type), 5607, November, 1906. 23. Begonia merrittii Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 5 (1910) Bot. 365. Luzon, Bontoc Subprovince, Vanoverbergh 513, 514: Lepanto Subprovince, Mount Malaya, For. Bur. 14491 Darling, January, 1909: Benguet Subprovince, Suyoc to Pauai, Merrill 4781, November, 1905; Pauai, Bur. Sci. 4385 Mearns, Bur. Sci. 8496 McGregor; Mount Pulog, For. Bur. 16176 Curran, Merritt, & Zschokke, January, 1909, Merrill 5602, May 1909: Mount Tonglon (Santo Tomas), Phil. Pl. 711, 858 Merrill, May, 1911, For. Bur. 4996 Curran, August, 1906, Elmer 6254, May 1904, For. Bur. 11107 Whitford, April, 1908, Williams 1211, 1532, November, 1904, Bur. Sci. 5455 Ramos, December, 1908, Mearns s. n., December, 1906, Merrill 4823, November, 1905; Mount Ugo, Bur. Sci. 5839 Ramos ; Mount Lusod, For, Bur. 15736 Merritt € Curran, December, 1908. An endemic species characteristic of the mossy forests of the Mountain Prov- ince, Luzon, abundant on most high peaks and ridges above an altitude of 1,600 m. Igorot (Bontoc) gitgitlang. 24. Begonia contracta Warb. in Perk. Frag. Fl. Philip. (1904) 54. The type of this species was from Sampaloc, Province of Tayabas, Luzon, Warburg 13085, in herb. Berol. I am disposed to refer to the species the following specimens although nearly all of them differ from B. contracta, as described, in some minor characters: Luzon, Province of Isabela, San Luis, Bur. Sci. 8008 Ramos, May, 1909, the capsules larger than in the type (1.5 em long), and with much longer pedicels (nearly 1 em in length), the leaves purple when dry: Province of Rizal, Bosoboso, Bur. Sci. 2621 Ramos, May, 1907, leaves more lobed than in the type and somewhat denticulate: Province of Tayabas, For. Bur. 6716 Kobbe, with lax, elongated panicles, and purple, denticulate leaves: Province of Bataan, Mount Mariveles, Copeland 2042. May, 1906, altitude about 800 m. Necros, Gimagaan River. Whitford 1607, 1648, 1588, 1504; Kinaruyan River, For. Bur. 7295 Everett. MInpanao, District of Zamboanga, Port Banga, For. Bur. 9319, 9273 Whitford & Hutchinson. _ As above interpreted the dates is a variable one, and additional material, in PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. 387 conjunction with careful field observations, may lead to a different disposition of some of the specimens cited. 25. Begonia quercifolia A. DC. in Ann. Sci. Nat. IV 11 (1859) 129, Prodr. 152 (1864) 320; F.-Vill. Nov. App. (1880) 99; Vid. Phan. Cuming. Philip. (1885) 116, Rev. Pl. Vase. Filip. (1886) 143. j Samar, Cuming 1696 in herb. Kew. I am disposed to refer to this species the following specimens, although most of them have somewhat larger leaves than has the type: Luzon, Province of Tayabas, Kabibihan, Bur. Sci. 13237 Ramos; Anoling River, Bur. Sci. 9826 Robinson, August, 1909. Mtvporo, Baco River, McGregor 310. Mrtnpanao, Lake Lanao, Camp Keithley, Mrs. Clemens 344, leaves purple when dry. 26. Begonia bolsteri sp. nov. Herba glabra, caulibus inferne prostratis vel subprostratis, radicantibus superne suberectis, circiter 20 em altis, vix ramosis ; foliis membranaceis, usque ad 12 cm longis, oblique oblongo-ovatis, basi valde inaequilateraliter cordatis, apice longe acuminatis, margine denticulatis, vix lobatis; in- florescentiis axillaribus, pedunculatis, floribus inferioribus femineis, superioribus masculinis, his sepalis 2, petalis nullis; capsulis aequaliter 3-alatis, circiter 1.2 cm longis, utrinque retusis vel subtruncatis. A glabrous herb, the stems unbranched, prostrate or subprostrate below and rooting at the nodes, the ends erect or suberect, 20 cm higher or less, the internodes elongated. Leaves membranaceous, oblong-ovate or narrowly ovate, 6 to 12 cm long, 3 to 6 em wide, very strongly and obliquely inequilateral, the base prominently cordate, both lobes rounded, the apex rather slenderly long-acuminate,’ the margins denticulate or ciliate-denticulate, not lobed, but sometimes slightly repand ; basal nerves 7% or 8; petioles 2 to 4 cm long; stipules brown, membranaceous, ac- uminate, oblong-ovate, about 8 mm long. Inflorescence axillary, solitary, the peduncles about 4 cm long, the lower flowers pistillate, the upper ones staminate. Staminate flowers pink. Sepals 2, orbicular-reniform, ” 5 to 6 mm in diameter, the pedicels slender, 4 to 5 mm long. Petals none. Stamens 15 to 25, the filaments 1 to 1.5 mm long; anthers nar- rowly obovoid, truncate or obtuse, about 1 mm long. Bracteoles ovate, about 3 mm long, frequently wider than long, deciduous. Pistillate - flowers with pedicels 5 to 8 mm long, the bracts broadly ovate, 3 to 3.5 mm long, the lobes 4, the two outer ones slightly exceeding the inner ones, broadly ovate, obtuse, 5 to 6 mm long. Styles 3, nearly free, ‘about 4 mm long, forked above, the stigmas spiral. Capsules 10 to 12 mm long, about 1.5 em wide, the apex truncate or somewhat retuse, the base rounded, equally 3-winged, the wings broadly rounded, 4 to 6 mm wide. Placentas 2-partite. : Mrnpanao, Province of Surigao, Bolster 310, April, 1906, said by the collector to be common in damp shaded places at an altitude of about 75 m. @ 388 MERRILL. 27. Begonia ramosii sp. nov. Herba erecta, succulenta, glabra, 20 ad 50 cm alta, pauce ramosa; foliis membranaceis, oblongo-ovatis valde inaequilateralibus, basi non angustatis, valde oblique cordatis, apice acuminatis, margine distanter irregulariter dentatis, haud lobatis; inflorescentiis axillaribus, brevibus, congestis, angustis, 2 ad 4 cm longis; floribus masculinis numerosis, sepalis 2, suborbicularibus, petalis nullis; capsulis obovatis, 1.3 ad 1.5 em longis, truncatis, base acutis, aequaliter 3-alatis. An erect, glabrous, succulent, sparingly branched herb 20 to 50 cm high, the lower parts of the stems prostrate or ascending, often rooting. Leaves when dry membranaceous, oblong-ovate, obliquely inequilateral, 12 to 18 cm long, 4 to 7.5 cm wide, base obliquely and prominently cordate, both lobes rounded, one much narrower than the other, apex prominently acuminate, margins irregularly and rather distantly dentate, not lobed; basal nerves 7, the outer ones short the lateral nerves above the base usually about 3 on each side of the midrib; petioles 4 to 8 cm long; stipules caducous, membranaceous, 1 to 1.5 cm long. Panicles in the upper axils, narrow, congested, 4 cm long or less. Male flowers pink, several on each of the very short lateral branches of the panicle, the bracts 10 to 15 mm long. Sepals 2, suborbicular or orbicular- obovate, about 7 mm long. Petals none. Stamens about 20. Female flowers: Perianth-lobes 4, subequal, oblong, obtuse, 9 to 10 mm long. Styles 3, forked; stigmas twisted. Capsules obovate, 1.3 to 1.5 cm long, about 2 cm wide, truncate or subtruncate, base narrowed, rounded or subacute, equally 3-winged: Luzon, Province of Laguna, San Antonio, in forests, Bur. Sci. 10941, 10942 (type) 12047 Ramos, August, 1910. : 28. Begonia cumingiana (Kotzsch) ©. DC. Prodr. 15% (1864) 320; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 98; Vid. Phan. Cuming. Philip. (1885) 116, Rev. Pl. Vase. ‘Filip. (1886) 143. Peter ingiana Klotzsch in Monatsb. Berl. Akad. (1854) 124, Abh. Akad. Berl. (1855) 75, t. 6, f. C. Diploclinium cumingianwm Mig. Fl. Ind. Bat. 1* (1857) 691. Luzon, Province of Albay, Cuming 856 in herb. Kew.: Province of Albay, For. Bur. 12260 Curran, June, 1908. The specimen collected by Mr. Curran agrees closely with the description and with sketches made by myself from Cuming’s plant in the Kew Herbarium. It is well characterized by its short petioles. Endemic. 29. Begonia rizalensis sp. nov. Herba erecta, ramosa, subtus foliis ramulis petiolisque breviter brun- neo-strigosis ; foliis oblongis valde inaequilateralibus, basi vix angustatis, oblique cordatis, altero latere late rotundatis, altero angustis, acutis, apice acuminatis, margine distanter irregulariter dentatis; petiolo ad 10 mm longo; floribus paniculatis, masculinis sepalis 2, reniformi-orbicu- PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. 389 laribus, basi cordatis, circiter 9 mm latis, petalis nullis; capsulis late ellipticis utrinque subaequaliter rotundatis vel subtruncatis, aequaliter 3-alatis, 1.3 ad 1.8 cm longis, 1.5 ad 2 em latis. An erect branched herb, the branches, petioles and lower surfaces of the leaves brown-strigose with rather stout, short hairs. Leaves oblong, coriaceous when dry, 8 to 12 em long, 2 to 4.5 cm wide, strongly inequilateral, base obliquely cordate, one side broad, rounded, the other acute, apex slenderly acuminate, margins distantly and irregularly den- tate or subentire; basal nerves about 7, the outer ones very short, the lateral ones above the base 3 or 4 on each side of the midrib, beneath densely brown-strigose; petioles 5 to 10 mm long, densely strigose; stipules membranaceous, lanceolate, acuminate, about 1.5 em long, ca- ducous. Panicles terminal, open, few-flowered, about 5 cm long, short- - peduncled, glabrous. Male flowers red or pink. Sepals 2, suborbicular- reniform, rounded, base cordate, about 9 mm wide. Petals none. Stamens about 40, the anthers small. Female flowers red or pink, long- pedicelled. Perianth-segments 4, subequal, ovate, about 9 mm long. Styles 3, forked; sigmas spirally twisted. Capsules broadly elliptic, subequally rounded or subtruncate at both ends, equally 3-winged, 1.3 to 1.8 em long, 1.5 to 2 cm wide. Luzon, Province of Rizal, San Isidro, Bur. Sci. 12109 Ramos, June, 1910 (type) ; Montalban, Loher 6083, April, 1905. A species well characterized by its brown-strigose branches, petioles, and lower surfaces of its leaves. 30. Begonia esculenta sp. nov. Erecta, ramosa, herbacea vel suffruticosa; foliis oblongo-ovatis, valde inaequilateralibus, apice longe tenuiter acuminatis, basi haud cordatis, uno latere late rotundatis altero multo angustioribus, acutis; subtus, praesertim ad nervos, minutissime pauce brunneo-furfuraceis; paniculis masculinis terminalibus, amplis, diffusis, usque ad 11 cm longis, floribus miniatis, usque ad 2.3 cm diametro. An erect, branched, herbaceous or suffrutescent plant less than 1 m high, glabrous except the very slightly and minutely brown-furfuraceous lower surfaces of the leaves. Branches terete, rather slender, brownish, smooth or somewhat striate when dry. Leaves oblong-ovate, chartaceous or subcoriaceous, 8 to 14 cm long, 2.5 to 3.5 em wide, slightly shining or dull when dry, glabrous on the upper surface, beneath paler and with scattered, minute, brown, furfuraceous hairs or scales, especially on the nerves, the apex slenderly and acutely long-acuminate, the base broad and rounded on one side of the midrib, much narrower and acute on the other, not at all cordate, the margins distantly and irregularly sharply denticulate, not at all lobed, or on the narrower side subentire ; basal nerves usually 7, two or three additional ones on each side of the midrib above the base; petioles 1 to 1.8 cm long. Pistillate flowers 390 _ MERRILL. not seen. Staminate panicles terminal, ample, dichotomously branched, about 11 cm long, diffuse, rather many-flowered, the pedicels slender, 5 to 7 mm long, the bracts small, lanceolate, acuminate, about 2 mm long, deciduous. Staminate flowers vermillion, about 2.4 em in dia- meter. Sepals 2, broadly ovate, or orbicular-ovate, rounded, about 12 mm long. Stamens about 30; anthers narrowly obovoid, obtuse, about 1.2 mm long, the filaments somewhat longer. Capsules not known. Luzon, Province of Tayabas, Infanta, Mount Binuang, Bur. Sci. 9449 Robinson, August, 1909, in forests at an altitude of about 800 m. This species is characterized by its rather large, vermillion staminate flowers” that are arranged in diffuse, terminal, panicles, and by its leaves being nearly entire, denticulate but not lobed or dentate-lobed, and rounded, not cordate at _ the inequilateral base. It is manifestly allied to Begonia merrittii, B. malindan- ‘gensis, and related forms. The leaves, stems, and flowers like most of our species, have a pleasant acid taste, and are eaten by the Tagalogs and by the Negritos as a relish with fish. 31. Begonia subtruncata sp. nov. Suffruticosa, erecta, ramosa, glabra; foliis oblongis, subfalcatis, in siccitate chartaceis, subtus pallidis, basi non angustatis, oblique truncato- rotundatis, non cordatis, altero latere late rotundatis, altero angustis, acutis, breviter petiolatis, margine dentatis vel subdentato-lobatis, apice acuminatis; inflorescentiis paucifloris, floribus masculinis ignotis; cap- sulis 2 em longis, 3 cm latis, aequaliter 3-alatis, apice late truncatis, basi acutis. An erect, branched, glabrous, suffrutescent plant exceeding 0.5 m in height. Leaves oblong, often subfalcate, strongly inequilateral, base not narrowed, very oblique, rounded-subtruncate, not cordate, one side very broad, rounded, the other very narrow, acute, chartaceous and rather pale on the lower surface when dry, 7 to 15 em long, 2 to 5 em wide, dentate or subdentate-lobed, apex acuminate; basal nerves 7 or 8, the outermost ones not prominent; petioles 7 to 12 mm long; stipules lanceolate, caducous, about 1 cm long. Inflorescence in the uppermost axils, few flowered. Male flowers not seen. Female flowers: Perianth segments ovate, about 7 mm long; styles 3, short, forked, the stigmas spirally twisted; bracts 2, at the base of each flower, membranaceous, ovate, about 8 mm long. Capsules 2 cm long, 3 cm wide across the truncate apex, equally 3-winged, narrowed to the acute base. Luzon, Province of Union, Castilla, Lober 6076, March, 1906. Probably allied to Begonia merrittii Merr., but differing in several characters, notably in its leaves not being at all cordate. It is distinguished from Begonia cumingii A, Gray, by its leaves being quite glabrous. i 32. Begonia everettii sp. nov. Suffruticosa, erecta, glabra; foliis membranaceis, inaequilateraliter oblongo-ovatis, basi valde oblique truncatis, vix vel obscurissime cordatis, | altero latere angustis, acutis, altero latissime rotundatis, apice subeau- PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. 391 dato-acuminatis, margine distanter repando-dentatis denticulatisque ; paniculis in axillis superioribus, diffusis, usque ad 8 em. longis, floribus inferioribus femineis, superioribus masculinis; floribus masculinis se- palis 2, 5 ad 6 mm longis, petalis nullis; capsulis aequaliter 3-alatis, 1.6 ad 1.8 cm longis, apice truncatis, basi rotundatis. An erect, apparently suffrutescent, branched, glabrous plant, the ultimate branchlets brownish or grayish, terete. Leaves oblongo-ovate to broadly oblong, membranaceous, 11 to 16 cm long, 3.5 to. 6.5 em wide, slightly shining when dry, paler beneath, the nerves on the lower surface brownish-purple, the base strongly obliquely truncate, or very obscurely cordate, one side much narrower than the other, acute, the other side very broad, rounded, the apex slenderly long-acuminate, denticulate, the mar- gins with distant, pointed teeth, somewhat repand between the teeth and denticulate, the larger teeth opposite the ends of the nerves and their larger branches; basal nerves 7 to 9, mostly distinct, forked; petioles 1.5 to 4 em long; stipules oblong-lanceolate, acuminate, membranaceous, about 2 cm long. Panicles in the upper axils, up to 8 cm in length, rather diffuse, the branches slender, the pedicels 8 mm long or less, the bracts membranaceous, similar to the stipules but somewhat smaller, the bracteoles much reduced, deciduous. Staminate flowers numerous, in the upper part of each panicle, pink or red. Sepals 2, orbicular-ovate, rounded, 5 to 6 mm in diameter. Petals none. Stamens about 20; anthers obovate-ellipsoid, 1 mm long, the filaments shorter than the anthers. Pistillate flowers one or two at the base of each inflorescence, their pedicels about 2 cm long; lobes 5, oblong, 7 to 9 mm long, 2.5 to 3.5 mm wide, reticulate. Capsules equally 3-winged, 1.6 to 1.8 cm long, 1.6 to 2 cm wide, apex truncate, base rounded, the wings reticulate ; placentae 2-partite. Necros, Sicaba, Daluapan River, For. Bur. 5587 Everett (type), November 12, 1906, locally known to the Visayans as aslom. LUZON, Province of Tayabas, For. Bur, 6717 Kobbe. A species probably as closely allied to Begonia contracta Warb., as to any other known form, but well distinguished by its larger capsules, and differently shaped leaves, the base being obliquely truncate but scarcely cordate. 33. Begonia malindangensis sp. nov. Species B. merrittii Merr. similis, et ut videtur valde affinis, differt foliis paullo majoribus, minus lobatis, basi haud cordatis uno iatere acutis altero rotundatis, floribus masculinis minoribus, 2 ad 2.4 cm diametro. Erect, herbaceous or suffrutescent, much branched, 0.7 to 1.3 m. high, glabrous throughout. Branches terete, brownish, rather slender, somewhat striate when dry. Leaves oblong-ovate to oblong-lanceolate, chartaceous, brown or olivaceous when dry, paler beneath, ‘somewhat shining when dry, entirely glabrous, 9 to 13 em long, 2 to 4.5 cm wide, 105968——3 : 5 392 ) MERRILL. strongly inequilateral, apex slenderly long-acuminate, base broad and rounded on one side, narrow and acute on the other, not at all cordate, the margins distantly and irregularly sharply dentate or denticulate, scarcely lobed ; basal nerves 5 or 6, the lateral ones above the basal nerves two or three on each side of the midrib; petioles 5 to 16 mm long; stipules lanceolate, acuminate, membranaceous, brown, 1 to 1.5 cm long, deciduous. Panicles axillary and terminal, rather few-flowered, mostly about 5 em long, the staminate and pistillate flowers apparently in dif- ferent inflorescences. Staminate flowers pink to nearly white, about 2.4 em in diameter. Sepals 2, orbicular-ovate, rounded, about 12 mm in diameter, with about 13 faint, slender nerves. Petals none.’ Stamens about 30; filaments 1 to 2 mm long; anthers narrowly obovoid, 1 to 1.2 mm long. Pistillate flowers few, usually two on each branchlet, each subtended by a pair of thin, membranaceous, deciduous, brown, boat- shaped bracteoles which are about 13 mm long, and, when spread, about 5 mm wide; pedicels slender, glabrous, about 1 cm long. Lobes 5, ovate or narrowly ovate, acuminate, reticulate, about 1 cm long. Capsules turbinate, the apex truncate, the base acute or rounded, about 2 cm wide, 1.3 em long, equally 3-winged, the wings reticulate, rounded at the outer upper corner. Placentae 2-partite. Mrnpanao, Province of Misamis, Mount Malindang, in forests at an altitude of about 1,800 m, For. Bur. 4563 Mearns & Hutchinson (type), May, 1906; District of Davao, Todaya, Copeland 1284, April, 1904. § DIPLOCLINIUM. 34. Begonia hernandioides sp. nov. Herba subglabra, caulibus stipulis brunneis ovatis acuminatis circiter 1.5 em longis obtectis; foliis longe petiolatis leviter inaequaliter subor- bicularibus vel orbiculari-ovatis, peltatis, basi late rotundatis, apice acum- inatis; inflorescentiis foliis subaequilongis; floribus roseis, circiter 1.5 em diametro; capsulis inaequaliter 3-alatis. Stem creeping, rooting, covered with numerous, large, brown, ovate or oblong-ovate, membranaceous, glabrous, or very slightly ciliate stipules 1.5 to 2 em long, about 1.2 cm wide. Petioles 7 to 18 em long, glabrous. Leaves peltate, slightly inequilateral, suborbicular or orbicular-ovate, 7 to 9 cm in diameter, membranaceous, glabrous, shining, radiately about 9-nerved, the’ base broad, rounded, the apex somewhat lateral, acuminate, margins entire or nearly so, the petiole attached at 1.5 to 2 cm from the basal margin. Peduncles’ glabrous, 10 to 25 em long, dichotomously branched above, the inflorescence at most 6 em wide, comparatively few- flowered. Staminate flowers about 1.5 cm in diameter, pink. Sepals 3, orbicular -to orbicular-ovate,-rounded. Petals 2, narrowly obovate, 7 mm long, 3.5 mm wide, obtuse. Stamens about 30; filaments 1 to 1.5 mm long; anthers obovate, blunt, 1. mm long. Capsules about ‘1 _ PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. 393 cm long, 1.5 em wide, the apex truncate, the base subtruneate or broadly rounded, unequally 3-winged, one wing nearly 1 cm wide, obtuse or subacute, the other two wings rounded, less than 5 mm wide, all reticulate. Placentae 2-partite. Pedicels in fruit about 1.5 cm long. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, Claveria, Bur. Sci. 7393 (type), 7387 Ramos, March, 1909, on rocks along streams. A strongly marked species, well characterized by its broadly peltate, glabrous, suborbicular-ovate, entire leaves. 35. Begonia rufipila sp. nov. Species B. hernandioidei valde affinis, differt omnibus partibus, prae- sertim junioribus, plus minus dense molliter rufo-villosis. An herbaceous plant, the rootstock creeping. Stipules linear or linear- lanceolate, about 1 cm long, acuminate, densely brown-villous. Leaves ovate or suborbicular-ovate, peltate, entire, base broad, apex somewhat lateral, acuminate, membranaceous, 6 to 9 cm long, 4 to 6 em wide, the lower surface with numerous, long, soft, brown hairs, the upper surface ultimately nearly glabrous, radiately about 9-nerved ; petioles 5 to 8 cm long, densely villous with long, soft, brown hairs, inserted at about 1.5 cm from the basal margin of the leaf-blade. Inflorescence about as long as the leaves, dichotomously branched above, ultimately nearly glabrous. Flowers unknown. Capsules about 12 mm long, 15 mm wide, the base acute, the apex truncate, unequally 3-winged, the wings reticulate, one about 6 mm wide, the other two about one-half as wide. Luzon, Province of Hocos Sur, Dolores, For. Bur. 5665 Klemme, October 31, 1906, on moist boulders in shaded places. A species similar to and manifestly very closely allied to Begonia hernan- dioides Merr., differing manifestly in its rather dense, brown indumentum which is composed of long, soft, hairs. : 36. Begonia longovillosa A. DC. in Ann. Sei. Nat. IV 11 (1859) 130, Prodr. 152 (1864) 324; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 98. “In Philippinis ad Manillam (Hiigel! 4170 in h. Vindob.)” ex A. DeCandolle : ; : mae the numerous specimens of this genus in our herbarium I have found none that agree at all well with the description of the above species. It seems to be well characterized by its capsules which are described as 6 lines long, 4 lines wide, with equal wings a line in width. 37. Begonia longiscapa Warb. in Perk. Frag. Fl. Philip. (1904) 52. Leyte, Jagor s. n., 1861, type in herb. Berol.! This species does not appear to be matched in any of the recent collections. Endemic. ; 38. Begonia nigritarum Steud. Nom. (1821) 104, ed. 2, 1 (1840) 194; A. DC. Prodr. 15% (1864) 401; F-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 99. Begonia capensis Blanco Fl. Filip. ed. 1 (1837) 724, ed. 2 (1845) 501, Naves 1. ce. ed, 3, pl, 413, non Linn, f. 4 \ 394 : _ MERRILL. _ Begonia rhombicarpa A. DC. in Ann. Sci. Nat. IV. 11 (1859). 129, Prodr. 15° (1864) 323; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 98; Vid. Phan. Cuming. Philip. (1885) 116, Rev. Pl. Vase. Filip. (1886) 143; Perk. Frag. Fl. Philip. (1904) 53; Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sei. 1 (1906) Suppl. 100. Begonia merrilliit Warb. in Perk. Frag. Fl. Philip. (1904) 53. This variable species is the most common and widely distributed one in the Philippines, occurring at low and medium altitudes, and as here interpreted, is represented by the numerous specimens cited below. Various forms are represented, but these are apparently largely due to habitat, although future careful field work may lead to a somewhat different disposition of some of the specimens. From an examination of dried material only, I have been unable to find characters by which any of the forms can constantly be distinguished, that is, characters that I consider worthy of being taken into consideration as a basis of specific or even varietal distinctions. Form A, with small to medium leaves, mostly less than 5 em long, and with short stems which are more or less densely covered with brown stipules: Luzon, Province of Laguna, Calauan, Cuming 510 (cotype): Province of Bataan, Lamao River, Whitford 204, 499, Merrill 3124, Williams 38, 250; Limay, Bur. Sci. 6183 Robinson. Form B, with medium to large leaves, mostly 6 to 11 cm long, and short stout stems covered with stipules: Luzon, Province of Nueva Vizcaya, Cordon, Merrill 143 (cotype of B. merrillii Warb.): Province of Bataan, Lamao River, Whitford 500, 1297, Borden 758, Elmer 6680 For. Bur. 13553 Alvarez: Province of Rizal, Tanay, Merrill 2343; Bosoboso, For. Bur. 3308 Ahern’s collector ; Antipolo, Bur. Sci. 12105, 12536 Ramos: Province of Tayabas, Atimonan, Gregory 141: Province of Albay, Bur. Sci, 2919 Mearns. Mtnvoro, Puerto Galera, Merrill 3324, October, 1903: Mount Malasumba, For, Bur. 8629 Merritt; Bulalacao, Bur. Sci. 1527 Bermejos. MIN- DANAO, District of Cotabato, Bur. Sci. 11719 Robinson. Form C, with small leaves, and slender, extended, stems, not covered with stipules: Luzon, Province of Bataan, Mount Mariveles, Merrill 3862, Whitford 1345, August, 1904, and September, 1905, altitude about 1,000 m. This form grows on cliffs on exposed forested ridges, and its extended stems is probably due to its habitat. Form D, with medium or large leaves and extended stems not covered with _ stipules: Luzon, Province of Bataan, Lamao River, Whitford 492, July, 1904, Bur. Sci. 1584 Foaworthy: Province of Laguna, Los Bafios, Bur. Sci. 9912 Robinson: Province of Cavite, Mendez Nufiez, Bur. Sci. 1286 Mangubat, August. 1906: Province of Isabela, Bur. Sci. 8029 Ramos: Province of Cagayan, Caua Volcano, Clark, August, 1908. Leyte, Palo, Elmer 7115, January, 1906. Munpanao, Province of Surigao, Allen 161, Bolster 302: Butuan, Subprovince, Weber 1208. PALAWAN, Malampaya Bay, Merrill 7245. This form corresponds to form B in its leaves, but differs in its slender, extended stems which are not covered with stipules, the internodes varying from 1 to 5 em in length. . As to the name of the species, judging from Kamel’s description of “Acetosa nigritarum”, on which Steudel based the name Begonia nigritarum, I am of the opinion that there can be no doubt but that Kamel’s plant was quite the same as the species usually known as Begonia rhombicarpa A. DC., and, in fact, . F.-Villar makes the same suggestion. The plant is common and widely distri- PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. 395 buted at low altitudes in the Philippines, growing in the habitat ascribed by ‘Kamel to his Acetosa nigritarum. Dryander,’ who examined Kamel’s drawing preserved in the British Museum, considered it to be allied to Begonia malabarica. Steudel’s name, I believe, constitutes a valid publication, and being the earliest one for the species is here adopted. I have been unable to find any good characters by which Begonia merrillit Warb. can be distinguished from the above species; cotypes of both B. merrillit Warb., and B. rhombicarpa A. DC. are in the Herbarium of the Bureau of Science, and although the specimens are not quite identical, the differences are, T consider, too slight to warrant the separation of the two as distinct species. Begonia rhombicarpa A. DC. var. lobbii A. DC. 1. ¢., is distinguished from the typical form of the species by its slightly larger flowers, but working from the description alone, I have been unable definitely to refer any of the above specimens to it with certainty; the variety is undoubtedly included in my con- ception of the species Begonia nigritarum Steud. Widely known as pingol bato and as lingat. Endemic. 39. Begonia acuminatissima sp. nov. Herba subglabra, foliis longe petiolatis, usque ad 11 cm longis, oblique oblongo-ovatis vel anguste ovatis, basi inaequilateraliter cordatis, apice sensim angustatis, longe acute acuminatis, margine leviter irregulariter lobatis; floribus 1.5 cm diametro, bracteolis parvis, ovatis; capsulis sub- aequaliter 3-alatis, 8 ad 10 mm longis, basi leviter retusis, apice acutis vel obtusis, alis plus minus angustatis, subacutis vel obtusis, 5 ad 6 mm latis. A subglabrous herb, the stems prostrate, creeping, glabrous or nearly so, the stipules brown, oblong-ovate, acuminate, less than 1 cm long. Leaves obliquely oblong-ovate or narrowly ovate, membranaceous, 7 to 11 em long, 3 to 6 em wide, glabrous, or the nerves beneath, in young leaves, slightly hairy, the base inequilaterally cordate, the lobes rounded, the sinus shallow, acute, the apex gradually narrowed and rather long and sharply acuminate, the margins with several to many small, irregular, broadly triangular, acute lobes, none of the lobes, exceeding 1 cm in length, and all broader than long, the base palmately 7- or 8-nerved : petioles 8 to 18 cm long, at first with few, scattered, brown hairs, ulti- mately nearly glabrous. Inflorescence about as long as the leaves, dicho- - tomously branched above. Flowers pink and white, the staminate ones 1.5 em in diameter. Sepals 2, proadly elliptic, rounded, 7.5 mm long, 6 mm wide, with about 8 faint nerves. Petals 2, narrowly obovate, 6 mm long, 4 mm wide, the apex broad, rounded, base narrowed, faintly 5- or 6-nerved. Stamens about 35; anthers 1 mm long, truncate; fila- . ments 0.5 to 1 mm long. Bracteoles broadly ovate, 1.5 mm long and wide, obscurely plunt-acuminate. Capsules 8 to 10 mm long, 15 mm wide, the base somewhat retuse, the apex acute or blunt, the wings °Trans. Linn. Soe. 1 (1791) 171. 396 MERRILL. subequal, 5 to 6 mm wide, somewhat narrowed and subacute or blunt, rarely rounded. Placentae 2-partite. Baxtur Istanp, Merrill 5419, October 8, 1906, on rocks along streams in shaded ravines, altitude about 400 m. Mrnpanao, Butuan Subprovince, Agusan River near Waloe, Merrill 7306. A species manifestly allied to Begonia rhombicarpa A, DC., but with quite differently shaped leaves. It is probably also closely allied to B. colorata Warb., but differs from that species in its leaves and capsules. 40. Begonia colorata Warb. in Perk. Frag: Fl. Philip. (1904) 51. Mindanao, District of Davao, Sibulan, Warburg 14633, July, 1888, type in herb. Berol.! ; ‘ This species is possibly represented by Copeland 803, from a rocky bluff near Davao, Mindanao, April 2, 1904. Endemic. 41. Begonia gitingensis Elm. Leafl. Philip. Bot. 2 (1910) 738. Herba succulenta ; foliis longe petiolatis, in siccitate chartaceis, oblongo- ovatis, leviter inaequilateralibus, basi cordatis, vix vel obscure obliquis, supra angustatis, acuminatis, usque ad 22 cm longis, margine subintegris vel leviter irregulariter dentatis; stipulis lanceolatis, acuminatis, 1.5 em longis; inflorescentiis foliis aequalibus vel longioribus, longe pedun- culatis, paniculatis; floribus masculinis sepalis 2, oblongo-ellipticis, 5 mm longis; petalis 2, quam sepala multo angustioribus; capsulis sub- thomboideis, 7? mm longis, 12 ad 15 mm latis, subaequaliter 3-alatis. Stpuyan, Mount Giting-giting, Hlmer 12368, April, 1910 (type number), altitude about 530 m. Endemic. 42, Begonia mindorensis sp. nov. Herba parce brunneo-ciliatis ; foliis oblique ovatis, membranaceis, usque ad 16 cm longis, basi subaequilateraliter cordatis, lobis rotundatis, haud superpositis, apice distincte acuminatis, margine leviter irregulariter un- dulato-lobatis, subtus ad nervos petiolisque brunneo-ciliatis; stipulis oblongo-ovatis, acuminatis, plus minus ciliatis, circiter 1 cm longis; pedunculis quam folia paullo longioribus; floribus circiter 1.5 cm diam- etro; capsulis aequaliter 3-alatis, 8 ad 10 mm longis, utrinque retusis, . alis rotundatis. An herbaceous plant, the stems creeping, footing, brown, rather stout, slightly ciliate with long brown hairs; stipules membranaceous, oblong- ovate, acuminate, brown, about 1 cm long, more or less ciliate. Leaves _ obliquely ovate, membranaceous, 8 to 16 cm long, 5 to 10 em wide, the upper surface glabrous, the lower distinctly brown-ciliate on the nerves, the base subequally cordate, the lobes broad, rounded, the sinus narrow, acute, 1 to 2 cm deep, the apex distinctly and rather sharply acuminate, the margins slightly and irregularly undulate-lobed, the larger lobes few, none of them exceeding 1.5 cm in length, acute, the smaller ones much broader, rounded or acute; base palmately ?- to 9-nerved ; petioles 6 to_ PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. 397 20 em long, distinctly brown-ciliate, the hairs more or less spreading, often curled. Peduncles longer than the leaves, ultimately glabrous, the inflorescence, including the peduncles, 30 to 35 cm long, dichotomously branched, 10 em wide or less, the bracts broadly orbicular-ovate or reni- form-ovate, rounded, brown, about 2.5 mm long, usually somewhat wider, rounded, distinctly punctate-glandular, the bracteoles similar but smaller. Staminate flowers white or pink, about 1.5 cm in diameter. Sepals 2, broadly ovate or suborbicular, rounded, 6 to 7 mm long; more or less punctate with scattered, small, black dots, with about 11 slender nerves. Petals narrowly obovate, 6 to 7 mm long, 3 mm wide, obtuse, narrowed below, 6- or 7-nerved. Stamens more than 50; filaments. 1 mm long or less. Capsules equally 3-winged, 8 to 10 mm long, 10 to 12 mm wide, retuse at both ends, the wings reticulate, rounded, 3 to 4 mm ‘wide. Placentae 2-partite. . ; Mrnvoro, Baco River, McGregor 284, April, 1905; near Lake Naujan, For. Bur. 6777. 6867 (type) Merritt, April, 1907. PALAWAN, near Iwahig, Bur. Sci. 779 Foxworthy, April, 1906, Elmer 12857, March, 1911. Luzon, Province of Tayabas, Bur. Sci. 13361 Ramos, Bur. Sci. 13131 Foxworthy and Ramos. A species allied to Begonia rhombicarpa A. DC., and related forms, differing especially from DeCandolle’s species in its larger size, brown-ciliate petioles and leaves, and especially in its capsules being retuse at both ends and the wings rounded. 43, Begonia longinoda sp. nov. é Herba petiolis pedunculis et subtus foliis ad nervos adpresse brunneo- setosis, caulibus prostratis internodiis elongatis; foliis usque ad 10 cm ~ Jongis, oblique ovato-subreniformibus, basi plus minusve obliquis, cor- datis, apice acuminatis, margine leviter irregulariter dentatis vel dentato- lobatis ; floribus masculinis sepalis 2 orbicularibus, petalis 2 multo angus- tioribus; capsulis ellipsoideis utrinque rotundatis, 10 ad 12 mm longis. anguste aequaliter vel subaequaliter 3-alatis. Stems creeping, rooting at the nodes, somewhat appressed brown-setose, the internodes elongated, 4 to 7 em long. Peduncles, petioles and lower surfaces of the leaves on the nerves appressed-brown-setose, the petioles and peduncles subequal, 12 to 18 cm long. Leaves 6 to 10 em long. oblique, ovate-subreniform, base prominently cordate, apex shortly acumi- nate, margins irregularly dentate or dentate-lobed, the basal nerves 7 to 9, radiating. Inflorescence dichotomously branched, comparatively few-flowered, the lower flowers female, the upper ones male. Male flowers white or pink. Sepals 2, orbicular, 7 to 8 mm long, rounded. Petals 2, narrowly oblong, as long as the sepals. Stamens about 80, the anthers obovoid, about 0.8 mm long. Capsules ellipsoid, 10 to 12 mm long, 8 to 10 mm wide, rounded at both ends or the base subacute, equally or subequally 3-winged, the wings narrow, 2 to 3 mm wide. ‘ ‘Luzon, Province of Tayabas, Tagcauayan, in forests, altitude about 200 m, ‘Bur. Sci. 13872 Ramos, March, 1911. * 398 MERRILL. 44, Begonia anisoptera sp. nov. Herba subtus foliis ad nervos petiolisque plus minus dense brunneo- villosis; foliis oblique ovatis, basi cordatis, lobis vix superpositis, apice breviter acuminatis, margine integris vel subintegris; pedunculis foliis subaequilongis ; floribus masculinis 2 cm diametro; capsulis valde 3-alatis, alis 2 angustis, rotundatis, planis, 4 ad 5 mm latis, capsulis aequalibus, ala tertia cucullata, 1.5 cm longa, 1.2 cm lata, deorsum extensa. Stems prostrate, creeping, or the apical parts somewhat erect, more or less villous-ciliate, especially near the tips; stipules oblong-ovate, about 1 cm long, brown, membranaceous, acuminate, more or less ciliate. Leaves obliquely ovate, 6 to 12 cm long, 4 to 8 em wide, the base cordate, the lobes broad and rounded, the sinus narrow, apex mostly shortly and bluntly acuminate, sometimes slightly prolonged and nearly acute, the margins entire or subentire, not lobed, the upper surface glabrous, the lower ciliate-villous on the nerves, and with scattered, shorter, brown hairs on the surface; base palmately about 7-nerved; petioles 4 to 12 em long, when young densely covered with long, slender, brown, ciliate hairs, less densely covered when old. Inflorescence as long as or some- what exceeding the leaves, the peduncles slightly brown-ciliate. Flowers rather few, the staminate ones pink, 2 cm in diameter. Sepals 2, orbi- cular, 10 mm in diameter, rounded, with about 14 slender nerves, the back with scattered, short, brown, somewhat setose hairs. Petals 2, thinner than the sepals, obovate, about 10 mm long, 8 mm wide, the apex broad, somewhat retuse, the base gradually narrowed, faintly 8- nerved. Stamens about 35; anthers oblong, nearly 2 mm long, somewhat acuminate; filaments 1 to 1.5 mm long. Capsules strongly inequilater- ally 3-winged, the capsule proper 1 cm long, the two narrower wings as long as the capsule, 4 to 5 mm wide, rounded, the apex acute, the base retuse, the larger wing 1.5 cm long, 1.2 em wide, strongly cucullate, rounded, the apex acute, the base extended downward below the capsule and rounded. Placentas 2-partite. MINDANAO, District of Zamboanga, Zamboanga, Merrill 5482, October 10, 1906 (type), on somewhat shadded cliffs in forested ravines, altitude less than 100 m; Port Banga, For Bur. 12342 Hutchinson, April, 1908, on boulders in forests altitude about 100 m. A species quite different from all other Philippine forms of the section known to me, well characterized by its very unequally 3-winged capsules, but especially by the large wing distinctly cucullate, much longer than the capsule, and produced below it. When fresh the leaves are purple beneath and more or less blotched with gray above. Another unusual character, so far as the Philippine species are concerned, which is shared with the next species, is the sepals being more or less ciliate on the back. 45. Begonia suborbiculata sp. nov. § Diploolinium (2) Planta valde succulenta, caulibus petiolis et subtus foliis ad nervos plus minusve dense brunneo-setaceo-ciliatis; foliis suborbicularibus, 5 PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. 399 ad 15 cm diametro, integris, plus minus obliquis, basi cordatis, apice - brevissime acuminatis; floribus masculinus sepalis 6 ad 7 mm diametro, extus parce ciliato-setosis ; petalis 2, obovatis ; staminibus circiter 40; capsulis obliquis, circiter 1.5 cm longis, 5-alatis, alis inaequalibus, una lata, concava, aliis multo angustioribus, planis., : Stems prostrate, creeping and rooting, red when fresh, setose-ciliate with brown hairs. Leaves suborbicular to subreniform, somewhat obli- que, 5 to 15 cm long, often a little wider, entire, when fresh very thick and fleshy, firmly chartaceous when dry, base deeply cordate, apex with a short, stout, lateral acumen, the upper surface glabrous except for few long brown hairs on the nerves, the lower surface brown when dry, the nerves densely brown-setose-ciliate ; nerves about 9, radiate, often forked ; petioles red when fresh, stout, 8 to 15 cm long, densely brown-setose- ciliate; stipules ovate, acuminate, brown-setose, about 1 cm long. In- florescence as long as the leaves and petioles, erect, glabrous or nearly so, branched at the top, the branches divaricate or spreading, few-flowered, the bracteoles small, deciduous. Male flowers pink. Sepals 2, subor- bicular, rounded, 6 to 7 mm in diameter, slightly brown-setose on the nerves outside. Petals 2, oblong-obovate. Stamens about 40; filaments free or nearly so, nearly as long as the anthers, which are oblong, about 1.5 mm long, the connective slightly produced. Female flowers not seen. Capsules oblique, about 1.5 cm long and 2 cm wide with one large concave, oblique wing, and 5 subequal much narrower ones. Parawan, Malampaya Bay, Merrill 7229, September 18, 1910, on ledges in forests near the seashore. A very characteristic species on account of its 5-winged capsules, one wing being coneave and very much larger than the other four which are flat. Perhaps not truly referable to the section Diploclinium. 46. Begonia oxysperma A. DC. in Ann, Sci. Nat. IV 11 (1859) 122, Prodr. 15% (1864) 287; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 98. Luzon, without definite locality, probably Mount Banajao, Lobb 465, type in herb. Kew.!: Province of Laguna, Mount Banajao, Bur. Sci. 2441 Foxworthy, March, 1907, For. Bur. 886 Klemme, June, 1904; Mount San Cristobal, Copeland ; Mount Maquiling, Merrill 5132: Province of Benguet, Baguio, Elmer 6013, Williams 986, March, June, 1904, Merrill 7688, May, 1911. This species was based on Lobb 465, but on account of the different localities given on the labels, A. DeCandolle considered the original home of the plant to be uncertain; on the four §) imens of this number examined by him, one label’ (Kew) gave the locality as Luzon, one (St. Petersburg), gave the locality as Java, and two gave no locality. As the species is not uncommon in central Luzon, and as it has not as yet been found outside of the Philippines, it is safe to assume that in this case the locality given on the Kew label is correct. It has been assumed by some potanists that the localities given on Lobb’s plants in the Kew set are the correct ones, but this is certainly not always the case. About seven species so far credited to the Philippines solely on the authority of Lobb’s specimens, so: labelled, almost certainly dia not come from the Archipelago, but 400 MERRILL. from Singapore, Borneo, or Java: see Merrill, This Journal 4 (1909) Bot. 149, sub Loranthus retusus Jack. : The section Baryandra A. DC., is based solely on. Begonia ovysperma, but I can see no valid reason for making a section for this species distinct from Diploclinium. The species is more robust than are the others of the section Diploclinium, but in all essential characters appears to me to be quite referable to that section. Begonia oxysperma and B, calcicola are closely allied, and both have scattered, fimbriate-ciliate paleae, these being the only two Philippine species known to me that possess this character. 47. Begonia calcicola sp. nov. Herba, caulibus crassis, rhizomate stipulis magnis membranaceis brunneis usque ad 2.5 em longis plus minus ciliatis obtecto; petiolis usque ad 25 cm longis, plus minus fimbriato-paleaceis; foliis oblique ovatis, usque ad 20 cm longis, acuminatis, basi subaequilateraliter cordatis ; pedunculis quam petioli longioribus, supra diffuse ramosis; floribus cir- citer 12 mm diametro; capsulis inaequaliter 3-alatis, apice truncatis, _ basi rotundatis, circiter 12 mm latis, 8 mm longis. Herbaceous, the stem creeping, stout, nearly 1 cm in diameter when dry, excluding the stipules, dark-brown, covered with numerous, membra- naceous, brown, ovate to oblong-ovate stipules 2 to 2.5 cm long, usually about 1 cm wide, cleft at the apex, the margins more or less fimbriate, the rootlets also very abundant. Leaves membranaceous, brownish when dry, obliquely ovate, 10 to 20 cm long, the base prominently and sub- equally cordate, the lobes broad, rounded, the sinus 1.5 to 3 em deep, open, the apex lateral, acuminate, the margins subentire or obscurely undulate-repand, the nerves on both surfaces with scattered, stout, usually more or less curled, brown hairs; petioles at least 20 cm long, with numerous, scattered, brown, slender, more or less fimbriate paleae up to 5 mm in length. Peduncles longer than the petioles, glabrous or slightly brown-ciliate, up to 45 em long, stout when fresh, dichotomously and rather diffusely branched. Flowers pink or white, the staminate and pistillate ones in the same inflorescence. Pistillate flowers: Pedicels slender, 10 to 18 mm long. Sepals two, suborbicular or orbicular-obo- vate, 5.5 to 6 mm in diameter. Petals two (sometimes only one), much harrower, narrowly oblong-obovate, about 5.5 mm long, 2.5 mm wide. Style less than 3 mm long, 3-cleft, the branches forked, the stigmas spirally arranged. Staminate flowers slightly larger than the pistillate ones, the sepals and petals similar but slightly larger. Stamens about 35; filaments about 1 mm long, more or less united; anthers oblong- obovoid or obovoid, blunt, less than 1 mm long. Capsule obovoid, about 12 mm in diameter at the apex, 8 mm long, the apex truncate, the base rounded, unequally 3-winged, the wings reticulate, one 6 to 7 mm wide at the apex, the other two about 3 mm in width; placentas 2-lamellate. Luzon, Province of Rizal, Montalban, Merrill 7062, January, 1910 (type), in fruit, Copeland s, n., September, 1908, ee PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. 401 This species is found on limestone cliffs in the gorge of the Maraquina River near the water-works dam at Wawa; it is manifestly allied to Begonia luzonensis Warb., and B. manillensis A. DC., but is at once distinguishable from the above and other forms by its prominently fimbriate paleae. : 48. Begonia fenicis Merr. in Philip. Journ, Sci. 3 (1908) Bot, 421. Baranes Istanps, Batan, Bur. Sci. 3619 Félix, May, 1907 (type), Bur. Sci. 3207 Mearns, May, 1907. BABUYANES Tstanps, Bur. Sci. 3893 Fénix, June 17, 1907. I am disposed to refer here also the following specimen from Lanang, Island of Samar, Merrill 5237bis, October 3, 1906, although it differs from the type in some minor respects. Additional material may prove it to be specifically distinct. Endemic. 49, Begonia copelandii sp. nov. Herba parva, caule repente stipulis brunneis oblongo-ovatis acuminatis usque ad 12 mm longis obtecto ; petiolis 4 ad 6 cm longis, parce brunneo- ciliatis; pedunculis quam petioli longioribus, tenuibus, paucifloris; foliis oblique ovatis, basi inaequilateraliter cordatis ; floribus masculinis 3 cm diametro; capsulis circiter 1 cm longis, valde inaequaliter 3-alatis, alis ° obtusis 5 mm latis, tertia 1.5 cm lata. ‘A small herbaceous plant, the stems creeping or the apices somewhat erect, dark-brown, with numerous, oblong-ovate, acuminate, brown, mem- branaceous stipules about 12 mm long, 6 mm wide, somewhat ciliate on back especially towards the apex. Leayes obliquely ovate, 5 to 7 cm long, about 5 cm wide, the base inequilaterally cordate, the lobes broad, rounded, the sinus scarcely 1 cm deep, acute, palmately about ?-nerved, the apex acuminate, the margins slightly irregularly sinuate, not lobed, distinctly brown-ciliate, the upper surface glabrous, the lower one with scattered, brown hairs on the nerves, under the lens distinctly white- maculate with small, regular, round dots; petioles 4 to 6 cm long, slightly brown-ciliate or nearly glabrous. Inflorescence slender, glabrous, about 20 cm long, slightly branched. Staminate flowers white or very pale- pink, 3 cm in diameter. Sepals 2, membranaceous, elliptic, rounded, slenderly about 12-nerved, 1.5 cm long, 11 to 12 mm wide. Petals 2, similar in texture to the sepals, oblong-oblanceolate, obtuse, about 14 mm long, 5mm wide. Stamens about 35; filaments 1 to 1.5 mm long; anthers narrowly obovoid, blunt, about 1 mm long. Capsules about 1 cm long, including the wings 2 cm wide, apex truncate, base broadly rounded, very unequally 3-winged, the larger wing 1.5 em long, subacute, the two smaller ones about 5 mm wide, obtuse; placentae 2-partite. Peduncles in fruit very slender, 2 cm long. Mrnpanao, District of Davao, Todaya, on rocks along the Baroring River, - Copeland 1255, April, 1904, altitude about 850 m. A species manifestly allied to Begonia colorata Warb., B. rhombicarpa A. DC., and allied forms, well characterized by its unusually large flowers and by its comparatively large, unequally 3-winged capsules. 402 MERRILL. 50. Begonia parva sp. nov. Herba parva omnibus partibus praesertim junioribus plus minus dense ferrugineo-pilosis; foliis inaequilateraliter anguste ovatis vel oblongo- ovatis, usque ad 4 cm longis, integris, acutis vel leviter acuminatis, basi leviter oblique cordatis; pedunculis quam folia longioribus, paucifloris; floribus 2.6 cm diametro; capsulis circiter 1.5 cm longis, inaequaliter 3-alatis. Small herb, the stems postrate, creeping, with numerous, long, slender, brown, ciliate hairs, and with ovate, brown stipules. Leaves inequilater- ally oblong-ovate or narrowly oblong, entire, 2 to 4 cm long, 1.8 to 2.7 cm wide, the apex acute or obscurely acuminate, the base slightly and obliquely cordate, the lobes rounded, the sinus narrow, acute, both surfaces with scattered, long, brown, slender hairs, the margins also ciliate with similar ones, the base palmately 4- or 5-nerved, the nerves faint; petioles 2 to 5 cm long, brown-ciliate, the hairs, as in other parts of the plant, slender, often 4 to 5 mm long. Inflorescence slightly longer than the leaves, the peduncle more or less brown-ciliate, bearing few flowers. Flowers apparently pink, the staminate ones 2.6 cm in diameter. Sepals 2, orbicular, rounded, 13 mm in diameter, with 12 or 13 faint nerves. Petals 2, nearly as long as the sepals, narrowly obovate or obovate, about 7 mm wide, apex broad, rounded, obscurely retuse, the base narrowed. Stamens about 25; filaments 1.5 to 2 mm long; anthers slightly exceed- ing 1 mm in length. Pistillate flowers about as large as the staminate ones; styles about 4 mm long, 3-cleft, the arms forked; stigmas spiral. Capsule somewhat obovate in outline, including the wings about 1.5 cm long and wide, the widest wing rounded, much longer than the cap- sule proper, about 6 mm wide, the base acuminate, the apex produced above the capsule, rounded, the other two wings shorter and narrower, about 3 mm wide, all reticulate. Placentae 2- partite. Luzon, Province of Benguet, Trinidad River, Bur. Sci. 5551 Ramos, December, 1908. A species manifestly allied-to Begonia longovillosa A. DC., B. klemmei Merr., B. trichocheila Warb., and related forms, but distinguished from all by its small, oblong- ovate or narrowly oblong, entire leaves. 51. Begonia klemmei sp. nov. Species B. trichocheile similis et valde affinis, differt foliis distincte irregulariter plus minus distanter crenato-dentatis, utrinque, praesertim subtus ad nervos, longe rufo-pilosis, valde acute acuminatis, alis capsulam distincte superantibus. An herbaceous plant, the stem prostrate, creeping, brown, about 6 mm in diameter when dry, the stipules ovate, brown, membranaceous, acu- minate, about 1 cm long, more or less brown-pilose in the upper part. Leaves obliquely ovate or oblong-ovate, 5 to 10 cm long, 3 to 6 cm wide, membranaceous, the base prominently and very inequilaterally cordate, PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. 403 the sinus rather narrow, acute, 1 to 1.5 cm deep, both lobes rounded, one much boader than the other, not superposed, apex prominently and sharply acuminate, the acumen usually about 1.5 cm long, margins dis- tinctly distantly and irregularly crenate-dentate, frequently also with few, small lobes which are broader than-long, the upper surface, at least when young, with scattered, long, brown hairs, ultimately becoming nearly glabrous, on the lower surface similar hairs more numerous and per- sistent, the margins prominently ciliate with long brown hairs; base palmately 7- to 9-nerved ; petiole 5 to 20 cm long, distinctly villous with long, slender, brown hairs. Peduncles as long as or exceeding the leaves, with few to many long, ciliate, brown hairs, dichotomously branched at the apex, the branched part of the inflorescence about 5 cm long, rather few- flowered. Flowers white, the staminate ones about 2.5 cm in diameter, the slender pedicels 2 cm in length. Sepals 2, broadly elliptic, rounded at both ends, about 12 mm long, 10 mm wide, with about 13 slender nerves. Petals 2, thinner than the sepals, narrowly obovate, 10 to 11 mm long, about % mm wide, the apex rounded and prominently retuse, the base gradually narrowed. Stamens about 30; filaments 2 mm long; ~ anthers slightly exceeding 1 mm in length. Pistillate flowers: Sepals and petals not seen: Styles 3-cleft, about 3 mm long, the arms 2- or 3-forked, the stigmas spirally arranged. Capsules about 12 mm long, 13 to 14 mm wide, unequally 3-winged, the wings all rounded, the broad one 6 mm wide, the two narrower ones one-half as wide, all dis- tinctly exceeding the capsule, reticulate, the apex broadly rounded, the base abruptly and obscurely acuminate. Placentas 2-partite. Luzon, District of Lepanto, Sagada, For. Bur. 5677 Klemme, (type), November 8, 1906, on boulders in moist forests, altitude about 1,600 m: Province of Benguet, Baguio, Williams 1318, September 24, 1904. A species manifestly allied to Begonia trichocheila Warb., and to B. longo- villosa A. DC., differing from the former in its prominently and sharply acuminate leaves which are more or less toothed, not entire, and distinctly villous on both surfaces with long, brown hairs, and from the latter in its differently shaped stipules, quite differently shaped leaves, longer petioles, and other characters. 52. Begonia luzonensis Warb. in Perk. Frag. Fl. Philip. (1904) 52. Luzon, Province of Rizal, Montalban, Warburg 13084, type in herb. Berol.! : Province of Laguna, Pagsanjan, Merrill 2187 ; Mabalucbaluc Pass, Bur, Sei. 6045 Robinson, March, 1908: Province of Bataan, Mount Mariveles, Merrill 3734, January, 1904, Elmer 6849, November, 1904. As noted under Begonia manillensis A. DC., I am disposed to refer to this species the specimen collected in Luzon by Lobb, and referred with doubt by A. DeCandolle to Begonia manillensis. Endemic. 53. Begonia vanoverberghii sp. nov. Planta succulenta, petiolis, pedunculis, et foliis utrinque plus minus longe prunneo-ciliato-setosis ; foliis usque ad 20 cm longis, ovatis vel oblongo-ovatis, valde inequilateralibus, basi oblique cordatis, apice longe 404 MERRILL. acuminatis, margine irregulariter acute dentato-lobatis; floribus mas- culinis roseis, sepalis 2, orbicularibus, 12 ad 15 mm longis, petalis 2, obovatis ; staminibus circiter 40; capsulis late obovatis, apice truncatis, inaequaliter 3-alatis, 2 cm longis, 3 ad 3.5 cm latis. A species most closely allied eto Begonia luzonensis Warb., differing especially in its much larger capsules. Peduncles, petioles, both sur- faces and margins of the leaves with few to many slender, brown, ciliate hairs 3 to 5 mm in length. Leaves ovate to oblong-ovate, chartaceous when dry, strongly obliquely inequilateral, 15 to 20 em long, 6.5 to 13 cm wide, base strongly cordate, apex slenderly acuminate, margins irre- gularly and rather coarsely acutely toothed-lobed, the sinuses often shallow, rounded, or the margin on the narrow side of the leaf entire or subentire; nerves 9, radiate; petioles 16 to 20 cm long. Inflorescence as long as the leaves, when young with many brown hairs, at maturity glabrous or nearly so, the peduncle up to 30 cm long, dichotomously branched at the apex. Male flowers pink. Sepals 2, orbicular, rounded, 12 to 15 mm in diameter.. Petals 2, obovate, 10 to 13 mm long, 8 mm wide, apex retuse. Stamens about 40; filaments slender, free, about 2.5 mm long; anthers obovate, 1 mm long. Female flowers not seen. Capsules very broadly obovate, unequally 3-winged, about 2 cm long, 3 to 3.5 em wide, the apex truncate, the base rounded or subacute, the larger wing 1.5 em wide, the two narrower ones less than 1 cm wide. Luzon, Bontoe Subprovince, Bauco, Vanoverbergh 831, September and Nov- ember, 1910, along small streams, the first collection with male flowers, the second with male flowers and mature fruits. Locally known to the Bontoc Tgorots as ganabeng. 54, Begonia trichocheila Warb. in Perk. Frag. Fl. Philip. (1904) 53. Luzon, Province of Rizal, Montalban, Warburg. 13260, type in herb. Berol.!, Loher s. n., Merrill 7063, January, 1910. Possibly referable here is Bur. Sci. 12958 Féniv, from Bauang, Union Province, Luzon, but the leaves are very much larger than in the type, and no fruits were collected. ; ' Through inadvertence the sepals and petals, in the original diagnosis, are described as 5 em(!) long, and the pedicels 1.5 to 2 m(!) long, apparent errors in both cases, the first for mm and the second for em. The description of the flowers may have been drawn up from immature plants, for on both the other specimens cited above, which undoubtedly represent the species, have the sepals of the staminate flowers from 1 to 1.2 em in length. Endemic. -55. Begonia manillensis A. DO. in Ann. Sci. Nat. IV 11 (1859) 129, Prodr. 15* (1864) 323; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 98; Ceron Cat. Pl. Herb. (Manila) (1892) 88. Luzon, Province of Rizal, Bosoboso, For. Bur. 2699 Ahern’s collector, January, 1905; San Isidro, Bur. Sci, 73 Fomwworthy, January, 1906: Province of Bulacan, Yoder, December, 1906: Province of Benguet, Mount Pulog, For. Bur. 16175 Curran, Zschokke, & Merritt, January, 1909. The type of this species was collected in the Philippines by Perrottet, and is preserved in the Herbarium of the Museum of Natural History, Paris; this specimen I have not seen, but the material cited above agrees well with the % PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF BEGONIA. 405 description. I have examined the specimen collected by Lobb (herb. Kew.), cited by A. DeCandolle as ‘doubtfully referable to B. manillensis, but consider Lobb’s specimen rather referable to Begonia luzonensis Warb. Endemic. 56. Begonia alvarezii sp. nov. Herba succulenta partibus basilaribus brunneo-ciliatis exceptis glabra ; foliis 11 ad 18 cm longis, in siccitate membranaceis, oblique oblongo- ovatis, integris, basi lateraliter valde cordatis, apice rotundatis; pedun- culis elongatis, quam folia longioribus; floribus ignotis; capsulis obovatis, circiter 15 mm longis, 15 ad 18 mm latis, basi acutis, apice late rotundatis vel truncatis, inaequaliter 3-alatis. A succulent herb the rootstocks and bases of the petioles and peduncles more or less densely clothed with long brown ciliate hairs, otherwise glabrous or nearly so. Leaves oblong-ovate, membranaceous when dry, entire, 11 to 18 cm long, 6 to 11 cm wide, the apex rounded, the base laterally deeply cordate, the sinus narrow, both lobes broadly rounded ; nerves about 10, radiate; petioles 11 to 20 cm long. Peduncles up to 40 cm in length, dichotomously branched above, the capsule bearing parts 10 to 12 cm long. Flowers unknown. Capsules broadly obovate, about 15 mm long, 15 to 18 mm wide, unequally 3-winged, the base subacute, the apex broadly rounded or truncate, the larger wing 6 to 7 mm wide, the other two about 5 mm wide. Luzon, Province of Nueva Ecija, Santor River, For. Bur. 22446 Alvarez, February, 1911. Well characterized by its entire leaves, the whole plant being glabrous except for the long brown ciliate hairs at the base. 57. Begonia gracilipes sp. nov. Suffruticosa, scandens, ramulis petiolisque parcissime setosis exceptis glabra; caulibus radicantibus, brunneis ; foliis leviter oblique ovatis, acuminatis, basi subaequilateraliter rotundatis, margine distanter irre- gulariter dentatis denticulatisque, vix lobatis, membranaceis, usque ad 8 cm longis, petiolo 5 ad 7 cm longo; inflorescentiis axillaribus, brevibus, paucifloris ; floribus masculinis longe pedicellatis, circiter 2 em diametro ; eapsulis turbinatis, circiter 1.8 cm diametro, aequaliter 3-alatis. ‘A scandent suffrutescent plant, growing on tree-trunks, the stems rooting at the nodes, branching, brown, and with the petioles with very few, short, scattered, setose hairs, otherwise the plant quite glabrous. Leaves ovate, slightly inequilateral, membranaceous, glabrous, shining and greenish when dry, 4 to 8 cm long, 2.5 to 5 cm wide, the base rounded, subequilateral, not cordate, the apex distinctly acuminate, the margins distantly and irregularly dentate and also denticulate, not lobed ; - basal nerves usually 5; petioles slender, 5 to 7 em long; stipules brown, ‘membranaceous, lanceolate, slenderly acuminate, nearly 1 cm long. Staminate inflorescence axillary, few-flowered, the peduncle and rachis 406 MERRILL. 1 cm long or less, slender, the bracts lanceolate, acuminate, about 2 mm long. Sepals two, ovate or oblong-ovate, about 1 cm long and 6 mm wide, obtuse. Petals none. Stamens about 25; anthers broadly ovoid, retuse, less than 1 mm long; filaments about 1 mm long, more or less united, forming a somewhat elongated torus. Capsules solitary, axillary, pedicellate, 1.3 to 1.5 cm long, about 1.8 cm wide, equally 3-winged, the upper outer corners of the wings rounded ; placentae 2-partite. Luzon, Province of Cagayan, Claveria, Bur. Sci. 7393 Ramos, March 13, ‘1909, on trees in forests, flowers white. A species manifestly allied to Begonia aequata A. Gray, and B. lagunensis Elm., differing from both in its relatively broader leaves, but especially in its elongated petioles which are about as long as the leaf-blades, 58. Begonia lagunensis Elm. Leafl. Philip. Bot. 2 (1910) 735. Species B. aequatae A. Gray simillima et valde affinis, differt foliis majoribus, usque ad 9 cm longis, capsulis majoribus, usque ad 1.6 cm longis, petiolo 1.5 ad 3 cm longo. 2 Luzon, Province of Tayabas, Lucban, Elmer 9327 (type number) ; Infanta, Bur. Sci. 9440 Robinson: Province of Laguna, Mount Maquiling, Merrill 6302, 7136: Province of Rizal, Loher 6093. Necros, Canlaon Volcano, Merrill 6981, April, 1910, in forests, altitude about 1700 m; Mount Silay, For. Bur. 4224 Everett, February, 1906, altitude about 1,000 m. Mrnporo, Mount. Halcon, Merrill 6135, November, 1906. Manifestly closely allied to Begonia aequata A. Gray, but distinct, readily separated by the characters indicated in the diagnosis above. 59. Begonia aequata A. Gray Bot. Wilkes U. S. Explor. Exped. (1854) 658; A. DC. Prodr. 15? (1864) 321; F.-Vill. Noviss, App. (1880) 99; Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 3 (1908) Bot. 84, pl. 4. Luzon, Province of Laguna, Los Bafios and Mount Maquiling, Wilkes Eapedi- tion, type in U. S. National Herbarium, Elmer 8324, April, 1906. The specimen collected by Lobb, preserved in the Kew Herbarium, and doubtfully referred here by A. De Candolle is either this species or the preceding one. DOUBTFUL AND EXCLUDED SPECIES. BEGONIA REPENS Blume; A. Gray Bot. Wilkes U. 8. Explor. Exped. (1854) 658; Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sei. 3 (1908) Bot. 84. The specimen on which the above Philippine record was based does not seem to be extant. Begonia repens Blume is a synonym of B. mollis A, DC., of Java, Sumatra, and Borneo; I have seen no Philippine material that I consider referable to the species. BEGONIA CRASSICAULIS A. DC.; Usteri Beitr. Ken. Philip. Veg. (1905) 118: Probably a pure error in identification, so far as Usteri’s record is concerned, or, the specimens were taken from an introduced and cultivated plant. The species is definitely reported only from Guatemala. BEGONIA BORNEENSIS A. DC.; F.-Vill. Noviss. App. (1880) 98. BEGONIA ISOPTERA Dryand.; F.-Vill.l.c. : The above two species were credited to the Philippines by F.-Villar, but I have seen no material from the Archipelago that I consider referable to either; probably admitted on erroneous identifications, — in ERRATA. Page 58, line 7 eigentiimliche. Line 27. from the bottom, for extreme read extremen. Page 61, line 17 from the bottom, for terminales read terminalis. Page 62, line 13 from the top, for terminales read terminalis. Line 16 from the bottom, for Léviellé read Leveillé. Page 225, line 4 from the bottom, for junghunnii read junghuhnii. Plate I, legend, for VARIABLE read VARIABILE. from the top for de read die, and for eigentumliche read 407 1059684 INDEX. (New genera and species and combinations published for the ‘first time are in black-faced type; synonyms and species incidentally mention 409 A Page. Angiopteris brooksii Copel. 133 Abies dammara Poir. -..-- ferox Copel. 134 Abutua indica Lour. -. Anisoptera Korthals -. 253 Acanthaceae doohesin brunnea Foxw. 254 Acanthophippium BI. .........------ 50 lophylla Perk. 256 mantinianum Lindl. curtisii Dyer -..-....-.---.---- 211, 255 & Cogn. - 50 giteo A. DC. 273 Acetosa nigritarum Steud 395 lata Walp. 256 Acrocephalus Benth. ........----- 356 mangachapoi A. DC. .......... 282 spicatus C. B. Rob. - 356 oblonga F.-Vill. -.... 256 Acrostichum aureum L. ... ~ 92 palembanica Mia. - 245 drynarioides Hooker .....- 92 plagata Blume 262 Adiantum — ee 86 thurifera _(Blanco) Blume 256 ges 86 tomentosa Brandis -.--..--.-.- 256 abet pr Copel. .. 138 dali Brandis 256 Agathis Salisb. -..-.------------------- pi AOL 201 alba (Lam.) Foxw. -. 167, 192 | Antherotriche lanceolata Turcz. -...---.-- 256 beccarii Warb. ......- _ 168 | Antidesma macgregorii C, B. Rob. -... 207 borneensis Warb. -- . 168} Antrophyum Kaulf, ...........--.-------------- 87 celepita (Koord.) Warb. sneuse 168 plantagineum (Cav.) ‘a Rich. - oS! S16T Kanlfsss 222 87 loranthifolia Salisb. 167 reticulatum — ) macrostachys Warb. 168 Bank. MES 87 philippinensis Warb. 167 semicostatum BI. . 87 Agelaea everettii Merr. --- 205 | Apluda mutica Linn. -.... 105 Aglaia aherniana Perk 206 | Apocynaceae ---.-.---------------2-0--20~ 219, 356 Aglaomorpha Schott ...- 140 | Aporosa microcalyx ( Hassk.) Hassk... 208 brooksii Copel. . 141] Araceae - 195 meyeniana Schott. -....... 141 | Araliaceae 218, 354 pilosa (J. Sm.) Copel. .. 141 | Araucaria excelsa R. Br. --.....-..-- 169 splendens (J. Sm.) Ardisia pirifolia Mez ..... 218 S 141 whitfordii Mez - 3 Ee prestige uggs Bl. a 50 | Areca catechu Linn, -......-.-------.--1e------- 107 malindangense Ames.. 50 eatechu Linn. var. longicarpa Alangiacea ee 2 | -Beee. 229 Allophylus leucocladus Radlk. ....-..- 181, 209 ipot a yar, polillensis ternatus (Forst.) Radlk... 209 Bec 229 Alpinia gikigiate major Ridley... ee OF poi saccharifera RADI. cokes: 229 rufa (Presl) K. Schum. 197 201 Alsophila australis ......-.-- Bs 360 parang hs Seattle nc....2 80 biformis Rosenst. - 364 kingii Copel. 80 leichardtiana F. v. Muell. 2388 _Artocarpus blumei Tréc. .- 107 truncata Brack. -..-.------------- 360 Asclepiad 220 Alyxia R.Br, ...------------------- @ 356 | Aspidiwm cesatianum C. Chr. -.....---.-- 16 : monticola C. B. Rob 356 | Asplenium Linn, 78 Amaranthaceae 201 acrobryum Christ -. 78 Amaryllidaceae -.- 196 affine Swtz. .......----- 79 Amoora polillensis OC; Bi Bobi x See 1 | prooksii Copel. 137 payee. imperialis (Miq.) | cuneatum Lam. -.. 79 » Planch. oe 209 | kingii Copel. ....... be 79 i . 209, oe | jauterbachii Christ. .......... 80 ; datroponsn muriontat Rote. sis... | macrophyllum SWicgincs. q9 z zizanioides (Linn. ) Urban et | Forst. 80 410 Page. A tusilob Hook. ..... 80 oceanicum C, Chr. . 80 79 pellucidum Lam. ... 79 phyllitidis Don . 78 scandens J. Sm. . 80 tenerum Forst. var. acum- Astronia williamsii Merr. Astrothalamus C. B. Rob. - Astrothalamus reticulatus (Wedd.) C. B. Rob. 19, 298 PA RIRP ETON BROGD 25 cssnc-sessestanccgoownnspecnsrate T7 accedens (BI.) Milde. . 17 cordifolium (BI.) Copel. .... 78 crenato-serratum (BI) pb 1 iar ae eh tendo ihr Seat 78 eyatheifolium (Rich.) BL AE eb Sie ty 78 esculentum (Retz.) Copel. pallidum (Bl.) Milde. ........ 78 sorsogonense(Presl) Milde. 78 Averrhoa acida Linn. ..........2....-..000.-. 322 B : . Balantium copelandi Christ. .... 136 Bambusa blumeana Schult. f. ..... Begonia acuminatissima Merr. ..... aequata A. Gray .. agusanensis Mery. <: i Merr. isopt Merr. — Roxb, var. cee ee crtspipiia Eim. pict itch socdesceteueis ingi A. DC. cumingiana (Kotzsch) C. DC. . 384, fenicis Merr. ......... gitingensis Elm. .... cili Merr. halconensis Merr. ..... hernandioides Merr. heteroclinis ee . Page. Begonia leytensis Elm. .... 384 littleri Merr. 379 loheri Merr. . 382 longinoda Merr. .. 397 longiscapa Warb. 393 longistipula Merr. .................. 3879 longovillosa A, DC. .... 393, 402, 403 luzonensis Warb. ........ 401, 403, 405 malindangensis Merr. ............ 391 manillensis A. DC, ... 491, 403, 404 mearnsii Merr. .... 383 merrillii Warb. . 894, 395 merrittii Merr. ........... ..-. 386, 390 ~ mind is Warb. 376 mindorensis Merr. . 396 mollis A. DC. ...... 406 negrosensis Elm. 3885 nigritarum Steud. .......... ree 393 Oxyeperiae A. G2. 22s: 399 pala Merr. 380 parva Merr.. 402 philippinensis: “ “De... 384 pseudo-lateralis Warb. 374 quercifolia A. DC, .. - 387 TRON Mert . as 388 Pepetin: Blame sos jiccscsccseotenee 406 rhombicarpa A. DC. .. 394, 395, 396, 897, 401 rhombicarpa A. DC. var. lob- bii A. DC. . 395 rizalensi Morr. . 388 robinsonii Merr. .............. 875 rufipila Merr. ..... 393 salaziensis Gaudich, var. cal- leryana A. DC. .......... 374 suborbiculata Merr. ...... arm ca subtruncata Merr. . Saou trichocheila Warb. . piers 402, “03, tor vanoverberghii Merr. . 403 weberi Merr. .... 381 Bel da chi is (Linn.) DC. 196 Bi 1 ERP IES SO eae 221 Bihania borneensis Meissn. ..... 179 Blechnum Linn. ................ orientale L. .... Boeh ia Jacq. arachnoidea Walp. .... 6 beyeri C. B. Rob. 309 blumei Wedd. 2 blumei Merr. -. 3 blumei Wedd. 9 lebica Bl. 5 cumingi Bl. 2 eylindrica Willd. ...........-.... 6° densiflora Hook, & Arn. .... 5 heterophylla Wedd. 2 heterophylla Blume 2,9 interrupta Willd. ... i malabarica Wedd. -....---- 8 moluccana Wed, ...----------- 11 -. multiflora C. B. Rob... : 4 4 a INDEX. 411 Page. Boehmeria platyphylla var. loochooen- Carex nodiflora Boeck. . ste Wedds cqcaa. 5 phacota Spreng. .. rupestris C. B. Rob. .......... 5 pycnothyrsos Kiikenth. .. 60 q igera Wedd. it rafflesiana Boott -.....2--:.....-:..-. 59 tenacissima Gaudich. ........ 4 rafflesiana var. ti (Cc. B. villosa C. B. Rob. ....... room 3 Clarke) Kiikenth..-.................. 60 ddelli Vidal 5 rafflesiana var. scaberrima Boraginaceae 220 (Boeck.) Kiikenth. 60 Bulbophyllum Thou... Soe 54 ramosii Kiikenth. -.... 63 chryseum Ames ............ 54 rara Boott subsp. pAatiacae cumingii Reichb. f. -.... 55 Boott 58 makoyanum Reichb. f...55, 197 rhizomatosa Steud. «................. 61 Burseraceae 206 rhynchachaenium C, B, Clarke 62 ‘ secaberrima O. B, Clarke.....::.-..- 60 Cc subtransversa C. B. Clarke -..- 63 Calamus diepenhorstii Mig. var. exu- ‘tristachya Thunb. var. pocilli- ‘Jans Becc. 230 formis (Boott) Kiikenth. .... 62 filispadix Bece. ......... ra ae 230 turrita C. B. Clarke ................ 63 hookerianus Bece. ... : 230 walkert Arn. var. turrita Kii- microcarpus Becc. 230 kenth. 63 mollis Blanco 106 | Casuarinaceae 198 ornatus Blume var. philip- Cephal lebica Warb. 166 i is Bece. 230 sumatrana Miq. 166 dealiinrpe: dublalhida. iimemeienicay 220 | Ceratostylis Bl. -.................. - 50 Campanulaceae 227 philippinensis Rolfe ........ 50 Canarium ovatum Engl. .. 206 | Cestichis Pfitzer. -...: 47 pachyphyllum Perk. 206 lyonii Ames Ba ee perkinsiae Merr. .. 206 vestita (Reichb. f.) Ames. 197 Cannaceae 197 | Chamabainia Wight. ... 11 Capparidaceae 205 cuspidata Wight .. 11 Carex L. 58 ? squamigera Wedd. ........ 11 b Ness .... 59 | Cheilanthes Swarts. 0.00 00k. 86 breviculmis R. Br. var. kin- tenuifolia (Burm.) Swts. 86 giana (Leveillé et Vaniot) CMIOPATIEMACORD tes ko oe 199 Kilkenthit....sitacns oi iL ty 62 | Cicca Linn. ‘ 322 breviculmis R. Br. subsp. roy- Gistiche = -Diltn: 2 Ss 322 Jeana . Nees i cit:. dota rosens- 62 | Cirrhopetalum chryseum Krinzl. 54 brunnea:: THUMD.:< csp sas... 63 cumingii Lindl. ... 55 brunnea Thunb. var. subteio- makoyanum Reichb. f. 55 gyna Kiikenth. 63 | Clei Bl. + 64 . lanica Boeck. 59 kunstleri Hook. f. . 54, 197 continua C, B. Clarke ............ 59, 60 | Cleistanthus Hook. f. ........ "323 cryptostachys Brongn. 62 dlancot: Vidal.............0...... 327 cumingiana Steud. 61 bridelifolius C, B. Rob... 323 cumingii Vid. ..:. 61 megacarpus C. B. Rob... 323 elmeri Kiikenth. . 64 mindanaensis C. B.Rob... 324 fibrata Boott ».... peat bee 61 misamisensis C. B. Rob... 325 filicina Nees var. ceylanica myrianthoides CC. B. (Boeck.) Kiikenth, ............-... 59 325 filicina var. ceylanica forma pilosus C. B. Rob. fe 888. depauperata Kiikenth, .......... 59 vidalll es Os re 327 - filicina var. .ceylanica forma Clerodendro th Teijsm, & ~~ gaturata (C. B. Clarke) Kii- Bi d 220 kenth 59 | Clianthus binnendyckianus Kurz. 205 fuirenoides Gaudich. var, cir- Cocos nucifera Linn. .... 107 rhulosa (Nees) ‘Kiikenth. .... 61 | Coelogyne Lindl. ......... 40 graeff Boeck. 62 integerrima Ames. 40 indica L. var. fissilis (Boott) merrillii Ames ...........-.....-.- 40 BG sh 114 ieee es iene Svan mera Combretaceae 213 ligata Boott var. nexa (Boott) Sommelinneees 2 196 Kiikenth, 63 | Composit 228 loheri C. B, Clarke . 64 | Conif ‘152 WA loheri C. B, Clarke Nema, Connaraceae “205 : grandimascula Kiikenth. .... 64 | Connarus mindanaensis Merr. .. 205 merrillil Kiikenth. ........... : 63 | Convolvulaceae 220 - nikkoénsis Franch. & Sav. ...... 59 | Copal, Manila .... 150 412 Cordia subcordata Lam. Corypha elata Roxb... iced cS baves Balscabeeels Cryptostylis arachnites Blume............ Cucurbitaceae Cupressus torulosa Don.. Curculigo glabra Merr. -... Currania Copel. Cyatheaceae oyamensis (Baker) Copel. .. auriculifera Copel. .............--- betchei Copel. .....................-.. diformis (Rosenst.) Copel. . is Copel. brooksii Copel. .................-..-+- contaminans (Wall.) Copel. .. a EIR ECBO NE RONNIE He stigmosus (Sw.) Desv. ... Cynanchum schlechterianum Warb. .. Page. Page. 220 | Cypho) br Bl mer. ccenbsss 12 106 macrocarpus Index Kew. . 11 282 macrocephalus Wedd. ...... 11 84 microphyllus Elmer ........ 12 84 moluccanus Miq. ......---.---- 11 Cystorchis BI. 39 85 | Cystorchis javanica (Blume) Blume.. 39, 198 205 variegata var. purpurea 198 | | SRE Na St ae eo 39 D Dacrydium Soland. ..................---------- 153 elatum (Roxb.) Wall. .... 154 147 falciforme (Parl.) Pilger. 153 junghuhnti Mia. .........---.--- 154 Daemonorops ochrolepis Bece. .......-...- 230 Dammare alba Rumph. ...........-.....------- 167 lebica Koord. 168 orientalis Lamb. .... 167 rumphti Pres] -. 167 864 | Davallia Smith. ............... 81 360 kingii Baker .. 147 364 81 135 81 135 | pavallodes Copel. . ci 5 RT 69 kingii (Baker) Copel...... 147 360 | Debregeasi dich 18, 314 angustifolia C. B. Rob. .. 18 longifolia Rolfe .............. 18 Decaspermum Forst,. ............-0----+-s0100 346 fruticosum Forst.......... 346 Dendrob Sw. 52 acuminatum Krinzl. .... 53 hymenanthum Reichb, f, 198 indivisum Mig. .............. 52 lunat Lindl. 52 lyonit Ames ................. 53 platycaulon Rol 52 scopa Lindl. ....... 52 Dendrocalamus curranli Gamble 194 Dendrochilum Bl. ....... 41 41 41 41 42 Dend h 91 91 Dennstaedtia Bernh. ... 82 Dicksonia L’Héritier ... 69 papuana F. v. M. .. 0 69 Dictyoneura rhomboidea Radlk. .... 182, 209 Dienia gesta Lindl. 44 Dillent 210 Dinochloa scandens (Blume) O. Ktze. 194 D 196 Diospyros nitida Merr. .............--...---- 219 Diploclinium cumingianum Mica. .....-.. 388 91 | Diplycosia Blume ................. 355 91 opaca C. B. Rob. . 355 220 | Dipodium R. Br. ............. 55 paludosum Rei Ns 55 06 | Dipteris Reinw. ..........-...ccesccce0 17 . conjugata Reinw. ...........-...- 77 INDEX. 413 Page. Page. Dipterocarpaceae . 211, 231 | Dryopteris basisora Copel. .....- Shelissene 13 232 | ta Copel. 137 bd 234 confusa Copel. .............-...- 146 biological features.. 234 cucullata (BI.) Christ. .... 74 distribution .. 236, 237, 238 dichrotricha Copel. .......... 74 family character- falcatipinnula Copel. ‘ 74 232 kingii Copel. .............. 73 234 melanophlebia Copel. 147 233 mirabilis Copel. ...... 137 : 232 oyamensis C. Chr. . 147 special morphology ' paraphysata Copel. 74 and embryology... 232 paucisora Copel. .. 136 time of flowering philippina C. Chr. . 146 and fruiting ........ 235 polycarpa Christ. .......-..... 75 uses 238 prolifera (Retz.) C. Chr. . 75 wood . 233 quadriaurita Christ. .. 73 Dipterocarpus affinis Brandis . 246 sessilipinna Copel’.............. 145 affinis Whitford .. 245 setigera (Bl.) O, Ktze. ...... 73 vaudii Korth. ... 245 triphylla (Swtz.) C. Chr. .. 75 blancoit Blume - 251 urophylla (Wall.) C. Chr. .. 15 fulwus Blume ... 249 wariensis Copel. ..... i 73 gracilis Blume .... 248 | Dryostach il J. Sm. . 141 grandiflorus Blanco 251 splendens J. Sm. 141 griffithii Vid. ..... 251 | Dysophylla auricularia Blume... 221 guiso Blanco .. 273 | Dysoxylum altissimum Merr. -.. 207 hasseltii Blume .. 248 hispidus F.-Vill. .. 249 E lasiopodus Perk. ........... 245 | Hb 219 macrocarpus Vesque .... 245 | El 346 malaanonan Blanco .... 270 | Blaeagnus Linn. ...-.......-.----.0e---eseeeeeene 346 mangachapoi Blanco... 282 alingara Schlecht. ........-.--.- 346 mayapis Blanco .......-.- 256 angustifolia Blanco . 846 motleyanus Hook. f...... 251 cumingit Schlecht. ..... 346 pilosus Roxb. .......... 211, 244 ia Auct. 346 plagatus Blanco .......... 262 perrottetis Schlecht. ........... 346 polyspermus Blanco .... 277 ppensis Perr. 346 pterygocalyx Scheffer. 251 Hinshodionnti El rcs Bee Neat Sanita tts 92 speciosus Brandis 250 conforme (Sw.) Schott. 92 thurifer Blanco .. 256 | Blatostema Forst. 295, 299, 320 trinervis Blume -.......... 247 acrophilum C, B. Rob..... 320 turbinatus F.-Vill. . 249 banahaense C. B. Rob..... 307 velutinus Vidal .........- 249 bulbothrix Stapf ...... 295 vernicifluus Blanco ..... 248 carinoi W. R. Shaw.......... 307 warburgii Brandis ...... 245 discolor C. B. Rob. .......... 801 Dischidia hirsuta (Blume) Decne..... 220 filicaule C. B. Rob. .......... 302 oiantha Schitr. - 220 glomeratum C. B. Rob. 302 platyphylla Schitr. 220 hookerianum Wedd. 31 Discocalyx linearifolia Elmer ............ 218 lineare Stapf 296 Di Wedd. ps lithoneurum Stap: 296 indicus Wedd, .................... 11 longifolium Wedd. ... 303 Donax cannaeformis (Forst.) Rolfe... 107 lutescens C. B. Rob. ........ 304 Doryopteris J. Smith .......-......-.+--.----- 86 merrillii C, B. Rob. .......... 305 pap Copel. 86 bovat Wedd. 31 Drepananthus longifiorus C. B. Rob. 201 obtusiusculum C. B. Rob. 31 Drynaria (Bory) J. Smith. -............... 91 philippinense Elmer ........ 199 quercifolia (L.) J. Sm. 91 plumbeum C, B. Rob. ...... 31 rigidula (Sw.) Benn. ........ 91 purpureum ©. B. Rob... 306 sparsisora (Desv.) Moore. 91 scapigerum C. B. Rob..... 807 Dryopteris Adans. .........-.-.-.---s----+0---+- 72, 145 sikkimense C, B. Clarke.. 30 acanthocarpa Copel......... 136 simulans C. B, Rob. .......- 30 aquatilis Copel. ..............-. 75 thalictroides Stapf -~ 297 arbuscula (Willd.) 0. variabile C. B. Rob. ......... 307 MS Sa peer fa 74 variegatum C. B. Rob. .... 31 arida (Don) 0. Ktze... 74 | viridescens Elmer ............ 31 num oa A orn Hetmiothonachye Kant meet eae neylanica (L.) Hiiitheeicecses = 414 INDEX. Page. Page. Siateitiniatninen C. B. Rob. . aaa 295 | ocr funicularis Rumph. -.............. 175 manillensis ‘(Weaa. ) 172, 193 - 80; 200 | Gnetum arboreum Foxw: pws 174 Embelia porteana Mez ... 219 brunonianum Griff. ................ 173 Enterolobium saman (Jacq.) Prain 107 | domestica femina Rumph 173 Ericaceae 355 | domestica mas Rumph. .... 173 Eriocaulaceae 195 | funiculare Blume .................... 175 Eriocaulon merrillii Ruhl. .................. 195 | woemon Ta. gids... ‘ 173 Et ia Linn, 346 | gnemon laurinum F. -vinl. a8 178 } balerensis C. B. Rob. 346 gnemon sylvestris F.-Vill. .... 173 brevistylis C. B. Rob. 347 grifithii Parl. ................. 173 brunnea C, B. Rob. ..... 346 latifolium Blume ........ 174 ealleryana C. B. Rob 348 minus Foxw ....... 176 _elementis C. B. Rob. - ies 349 ovalifolium Poir. .. 173 corymbifera Koord. & Val... 349 philippinense Warb. . 175 i 350 | scandens Merr. ...... 175 250 silvestris Rumph. 178 : 213 | sylvestris Brongn. ......... 178 mindanaensis C. B. Rob. ...... 213 | Gonostegia Turez. . i. 9 subrotundifolia C. B. Rob... 213 alternifolia Ture. . 9 Eulophia R. Br. ............ 51 hirta Mia. . 9 dentata Ames _ ce 61 integrifolia Mig. PeveR 10 Euphorbiaceae .................. “207, 322 | oppositifolia Turez. ... 9 Euphoria malaanonan Blanco _ 270 | pentandra Mig. ...... 9 ‘ nephelium Blanco ... ae 270 | reptans C. B. Rob. .... 10 Eusideroxilon borneense Villar............ 179 | Goodeni 228 awageri Teijsm. & Binn. 179 | Gordonia acuminata Vidal 279 : vidalii Szysz. ... 279 Fr bids thro Linn. . dete Fag 199 paniculatum Blanco ......... 343 Fagraea auriculata Jack. ....00...000000..... 219 Bessie pellets Jcinice SORE r Jack. 219 | Guttiferae 211 Ficus Linn. 319 | Gymnogramme quinata Hooker... 85 sericea ©. B. Rob. ....................... 819] Gymnosperms, Philippine .. 149 Fimbristylis utilis Elmer................ 106,194 | Gynotroches axillaris Bl. ..... 213 Flacourtiaceae : Flagellari Hu vie brrsacec aa Hancea pierrei Pierre... ccc 265 Freycinetia luzonensis Presl. ..... Hats, Philippine PES SE Gat 2 aE 93 monocephala Elmer mie ic montalbanica Martelli .. 193 ental 114 warbergt! Siar ke SR oa 193 bard 118 G Calasi 115 Garcinia subelliptica Merr. 0.0... 241 hemp .: ws 121 Gesneriaceae pitas 222 history of Philippine... ae ee 194 means of di 109 6s. pandan ; 118 68 plants yielding materials... 102 ‘ 68 rattan F 117 linearis (Burm.) Clarke. 68 salacots 125 ba I Ridley . 197 seat of the industry... “oe 94 Hemigraphis strigosa (Nees) F.-Vill. Lecanopteris Blume. ....... Hepaticae 190 pumila Bl. . Histiopteris :J: ‘Smith: (3... 85 | Lecanthus wightii Wedd. .. incisa (Thunb.) J. Sm. .. 85 | Lecythidaceae Hopea Roxb. 259 | Leea congesta Elmer inata Merr. 264 negrosensis Elmer balangeran Korth. ........ 269 parva Elmer 24 basilanica Foxw. .. 260 | Leguminosae 107, 205 micrantha Hance 265 | Leptaspis urceolata (Roxb.) R. Br. si 194 mindanensis Foxw. .. 261 | Leptochilus Kaulf. .... ee 77 odorata Vid. ..... 262 axillaris (Cav.) Kaulf. .. 77 ovalifolia Boer], 263 ecuspidatus (Presl) C. Hopea philippi is Dyer 261 SER esc, eee 17 pierrei Hance 265 heteroclitus (Presl) C. plagata (Blanco) Vidal 262 T7 ta Turez. 275 | Lept di Bic 8 tangili Blume . 277 | Leptospermum J. R. & G. Forst. _..... 351 Hoya incrassata Warb. 220 Leucosyke Zoll. & Mor. .......... . 21, 298 merrillii Schltr. .... 220 alba Zoll, & Mor. orto 27 Humata Cav. 81 aspera C. B. Rob. ...........:.. 23 gaimardiana (Gaud.) J. Sm. 81 brunnescens C. B. Rob. .... 25 heterophylla (Sm.) Desv. ...... 81 candidissima, Merr. . 25 Hydnophytum formicarum Jack........... 222 capitellata (Poir.) Hymenophyllaceae 3s fs phones pecan 189 27, 298 Hymenophyllum Smith. .. : capitellatta var. celtidifo- dilatatum (Forst.) lia Wedd. ... 28 : 69 ltidifolia Miq. 28 70 hispidissima Mig. .............. 24 magallanensis Elmer ........ 25 69 mindorensis C. B, Rob. _.. 22 70 negrosensis C. B. Rob. . 27 reinwardtii 3 mien Ob ROD gree Bosch. .... - 69 ovalifolia C. B. Rob. ........ 26 serrulatum (Pr.) ©. quadrinervia C. B. Rob. 28 CHP, 2.2... eesseeeeeees 70 | Lignum emamum Rumph. .............--.- 164 subflabellatum Ces... 145) Liliaceae 196 Hypolepis Bernh, ...........-.----- Speebetes. 85 | Limnophila serrata Gaudich. ............ 221 Hyrtanandra p ira. Miquraisics. 9 | Lindsaya Dry. 82 : 1 ‘ tee brevipes Copel. 83 kingii Copel. ... 83 Teacinaceae 209 nitida Copel. .. oe Nase lodes philippinensis Merr. 209 orbiculata,; (Lam.) Mett. Iridaceae 196 var. odontosorioides Co- ‘ Ischaemum intermedium Brongn. 194 pel ey 1388 Ixora inaequifolia C. B. Rob. ... 222 sessilis Copel. 82 macgregorii C. B, Rob. 223 tenuifolia Bl. ...... 84 a trichophylla tts 83 Litsea Lam. 321 Jasminum macrocarpum Merr, . 219 chinensis Lam. «2.0... 821 Juniperus eclata Roxb. ............- 154 glutinosa (Lour.) C. B, Rob... 321 occidentalis Hook. . 169 sebifera Pers. .. , - 821 philippsiana Wall. 154 | Livistona robinsoniana Becc..........__ 230 rigida Sieb. & Zuce. . 154 | 1 i ; 219 ‘ Lomagramma J, Sm.. afd : Lophatherum gracile Brongn. ... ig4 Labiatae Loranthaceae ‘ ee Lagenaria vulgaris Sér. Loranthus polillensis C. B. Rob. —...... 200 Laportea Gaudich. . retusus Jack . 400 lanaensis c 'B. Rob. . ioe Loxogramme Pres] ae 87 meyeniana ( Walp.) Warb. te BRO. involuta (Don) Presi _. 87 mindanaensis Warb. ..... 293 oides Copel. ; peltata (Bl.) Gaudich 292 | Luffa cylindrica (Linn.) Roem. ........ gat rigidifolia C. B, Rob. 30 | Luisia Gaudich - Lasianthus copelandii Elmer 224 foxworthii Ames ... _ Lastraea OF Si ea a6 Lauraceae 205, 21 | Lycopod 416 Lygodium Swtz. ........-.....---:::--s:ee eee circinatum (Burm) Swtz. 67, ioe dimorphum Copel. .............. japonicum (Thunb.) Sw. .. 68, ie kingii Copel. .... 68 scandens Sw. .... " 63 semihastatum (Cav.) Desv. 102 trifurcatum Bak. - 67 versteegii Christ ............... 68 M Mail-Ombi Rheede 173 Mala Elengi Rheede .......--.+-.-s------- ey Malaxis Soland. 42 palabacensis Ames .............--- 42) bataanensis Ames 42 | benguetensis Ames 43 | curranii Ames .. 440 dentata (Ames) Ames. 198 | latifolia Smith 44 45 latifolia var. fusca Ridley...... Margarocarpus heterophyliue ¥ Wedd. . 2 Medinilla Gaudich. ..... ne annulata C. B. Metabolos laevigatus DC. ........ Microlepia Pres! speluncae (L.) Ee Microstylis congesta Reichb. f. ... Millettia capillipes Dunn. .... ; litoralis Dunn. .................. eee Mischocarpus Missiessya aspera Wedd. ........---.<-.-0-- celtidifolia Gaudich. . fagifolia Gaudich. ..... hispidissima Wedd. guiso Blanco ...... malaanonan Blanco. mangachapoi Blanco... mayapis Blanco.... polysperma Blanco... thurifera Blanco.... securiformis CHaasth.) MOR arses cscersesvenees Nauclea media. Hay. .. Nephrolepis Schott. acuminata (Houtt.) Kuhn. Nipa fruticans Thunb. Notholaena R. Br. ............ see hirsuta (Poir.) Desv. ...... NY, th Nyctocalos cuspidatus (Blume) Miq. INDEX. 417 Page. | Page. Qneocarpus A. Gray. ii. cceecsnt otis scpsnes 339 | Phyltenthue Linn. i055 nisin siaes _ 333 ferruginea C. B. Rob. ...... 340 | erythrotrichus C. B. Rob. 333 niet pare (Merr.) C. B. ! macgregorii C. B. Rob. .. 334 RRB ite setae oe oeeens toca 340 megalanthus C.B.Rob... 335 Oncosperma horridum ( Griff.) Scheff. 230 podocarpus Muell.-Arg. .. 330 Onychium Kaulf. Be BG .f Syste FAWik -..- ce, 78 tenue Christ. ... 86 longifolia (Pr.) O. K.. fa 78 Ophiogl 66 mambare (Bailey) v. A. v. Ophiogl Linn, 66 2S 6 EEL a eee 718 reticulatum L. .............. 66 | Phyllocladus L. C. & A. Rich. ...... 164 Ophiorrhiza involucrata Elmer .......... 224 hypophyllus Rendle 165 F4 Linn. 224 hypophyllus var. pro- Opiliaceae 201 tracta Warb. ..........-..: 165 Orchid 35, 107, 197 protractus (Warb.) Pil- Oreocnide er BOR itn A e 16, ee Ser: tee 165 Mig. Phytocrene blancoi (Azaola) Merr. . 209 athens (Wedd.) Mig. .... 17, one Pilea Lindl. 293 Oryea Gativa Tann. ................ 105 ealcicola C. B. Rob. ................... 30 Osbornia octodonta F. Muell 213 crassifolia Stapf 293 Ostodes Blume 332 johni Stapf 294 ixoroides C. B. Rob. .... 332 t lis Stapf 293 Otophora oliviformis Radlk. 181, 209 rigidiuscula C. B. Rob. - 294 Se ies so eee een ree 206 | Pimelea Banks & Solander. ...... 345 P philippinensis C, B. Rob. ...... 345 Pinaceae 167, 192 Pach Bl. 51 | Pinanga barnesii Becce. ...........-0......... 229 pubescens gS eee 51 | Pinus L. 169 Pachychilus p Bl. 61 ee RANG cancceccesiivkeweteested sen ass 167 Palmae 106, 195, 229 di Wail. 169 Pand 102, 193 ‘insularis Endl. . 170 Pabdanes botryoides Mareen? 193 khasya F.-Vill. . 171 tis Merr. 193 merkusii Jungh. & De Vr. 169 copelandii Merr. 104 sumatrana Jungh. .... 168 coronatus Martell: .. 104 sylvestris Finlays. 169 exaltatus Blanco . 104 taeda Blanco ..... 170 luzoniensis Merr. .... 104 timoriensis Loud.? 171 botan Blco. 103 | Piperaceae 199 \ implex Merr. 104 | Piper chaba Blume 199 tectorius Soland. ................ 104 & 199 utilissimus Elmer .. Pilipes: CO DC. sisi 199 Paphiopedilum Pfitzer. ....................--. villilimbum C, DC. 199 ciliolare (Reichb. f.) PISCUUS WOGR, fini niiens : 18, 311 Rte (casei. 39 arborescens (Link.) C. B. haynaldianum (Reichb. RN. ei cnintind' 18, 398 0.) RP ook c argenteus (Forst.) Wedd... 16, =p Parahopea balangeran Heim .............. Pi h Kurz. mn plicata Brandis ............ 16 warburgii Brandis ellipticus Wedd. ..... 15 Parietaria indica Linn, ........................ mindanaensis Elmer . 14 Parietaria ceylanica Linn. repandus (Blume) Wedd. me - 15, 7 Parkeriaceae eucculentus Elmer ............. PRUNE Be iid arnsigdicctne sce 266 | Pithecolobium angulatum (Grah.) contorta (Vidal) Merr. & Benth. 205 Rolfe . 266 | Plagiostachys philippinensis Ridley.. 197 paucinervie Brandis 266. Platea corniculata Becc. 179 Pentaphragma philippinense Merr..... 227 | Pl landii 198 Petermannia cumingiana Klotzsch ... 388 Podocarpus L'H6rit, 0s lice ceveresesece 157 Phaius Lour. 50 agathifolia Blume ... 158 50 amarus Blume .... 159 Phegopteris ferruginea Mett. .............. 76 blumei Endl. ..... 158 Philippine Gy perms 149 bracteata Blume ............... 162 Phreatia Lindl. 53 brevifolius (Stapf) Foxw. 160 prorepens Reichb. f. ............ 53 Hemasl. ~ 160 Phrynium philippinense Ridley .......... 197 ledi Ward. 160 418 Page. Podocarpus costalis C. Presl. 161 cumingii Parl. ... 157 cupressina R. Br. 157 discolor Blume ..........----.--- 162 dul ‘a Seem. 159 euryncha Mia. 159 falciformis Parl. 153 glaucus Foxw. ... 159 horsfieldii Wall. .. 157 imbricatus Blume ............ 157 imbricatus Blume var. cumingit (Parl.) Pil- H 157 | junghuhniana Mia. - 162 | leptostachya Blume 162 | latifolia Blume aos] latifolia forma temiadten: BE AE CAO BN pecs sc: Suances =s- 158 macrophylla var. acumi- natissima Pritzel ......--.. 162 neglecta Blume ..... 162 neriifolius Don .... 162 | neriifolius Don var. rept | fotia Stank icc acto iccus 160 neriifolius var. brevipes RSG 2 joo eocsncinegtst oss 163 pedunculate Bailey .... 159 philippeanus Benth. 167 philippinensis Foxw. .. 163 pilgeri Foxw. ........... 160 polystachyus R. B 161 rumphii Blume 164 sprengelit Blume .............. 159 Podochilus Bl. 48 fenixii Ames . 48 fruticosus Ames . 48 malindangensis Aries east 49 robinsonii Ames ................ 49 xytriophorus (Reichb, f.) BODE his is sa i pater ts Polyalthia oblongifolia C. B. Rob. - Polyosmia Blue £552.52. ess... retusa C. B. Rob. Polypodiaceae Poly pedis Lies. si. albicaulum Copel. ............ 90 annabellae Forbes .. = 91 decorum Brack. .. 88 89 Ming Donel 25082020. 89 krameri Franch & Savat. 147 multijugatum Copel. ...... 90 foli % 91 neo-guineense Copel. ...... 89 a Baker ... 147 Dapyraceum Copel. 255 90 phy L. 89 pteropus Blume. ............ 90,148 Copel. ...... 148 punctatum (L.) Swtz. .... 88 rupestre Bl. var. leuco-— TOE TG CON ee i 8s senescens Copel. ........ 88 INDEX. Page. Polypodium set: Copel. 139 sinuosum Wall. ................ 90 sparsipilum Copel. 139 verrucosum Wall. ... 88 Pontederiaceae «cake 196 Popowia polyandra (Presl) Merr. ...... 2038 Portul Pouzolzia Gaudich. arachnoidea Wedd. ..... dentata C. B, Rob. .... heterophylla Mig. -.. hirta Hassk. ..... indica Gaudich. .. integrifolia Dalz. ... macrura Wedd. . pentandra Benn. .. ‘ rubricaulis Wedd. .............. viminea Wedd. .... zeylanica Benn. Procris Commers. lagunensis C, B, Rob, ....... sess 31 philippinensis C. B. Rob 200 pseudostrigosa Elmer ............ 295 Prosaptia Pres]. 88 contigua (Forst.) Pr. - 88 Psilotaceae 192 Psychotria banahaensis Elmer............ 224 longipedunculata Elmer. 225 pinnatinervia Elmer ........ 225 Pteranthera mangachapot Blume...... 282 Pteridium Gleditsch 85 aquilinum (L.) Kuhn. ...... 85 Pteris Linn. 85 baccariana C. Chr. ...................- 86 longifolia L. ........ 85 deltoidea Copel. 85 ensiformis Burm. ... 85 gracillima Rosenst. .................. 364 1 na Bl, 85 Pteris quadriaurita Retz. . 86 rangiferina Presl. 138 tripartita Swtz. .... is 86 Pterocymbium tinctorium (Blanco) Merr. 107 Puni 212 Q Quercus soleriana Vidal........0.00.0....... 199 R Ranunculaceae Remirea maritima Aubl. . Rhamnus ie C. B. Rob. 342 etiigstananes C. B. Rob. - 342 Rilisophoraceae ii kine 213 Rubi 2 "922/357 Russelia juncea Zuce. .........2....0.--- eh 2d 206 Ss Saccharum spont subsp. indi : ' Hack. 105 Sageraea glabra Merr. Salgada laurifiora Blanco Sa ind INDEX. 419 Page. | 203 | St ia Presl MEER! at 179 aurita (Sw.) Presl. . 209 | Sterculiaceae ............... Sapotaceae 219 | Syngramma J. Smith ... Sarcocephalus pubecens C. B. Rob..... 225 hookeri C. Chr. . Sar di Lindl. 53 pinnata J. Sm. .. acuminatum var. lyonii Ty DP AISN. soncch Setivscecocieted 53 : lyonii R. A. Rolfe. = 53 | Tabernaemontana mucronata Merr. .... 219 Saurauia whitfordii Merr, .................. 210 | Taeniophyllum BI, -.......-..2.-.- eee 56 Saxifr 321 merrillii Ames ............ 56 Soheffiora Foraty: .4./ 0.0052. ccccccschescstceosts 354 | Taenitis Willd. 86 binuangensis C. B. Rob. . 354 blechnoides (Willd.) Swtz. .. 86 licifolia Merr. 218 brooksii Copel. eed trifoliata Merr. & Rolfe...... 218 | Tapeinidium:'C. Chr. 00.00.05... -2.. 2k _ 82 Schi 67, 192 marginale Copel. ............ 82 Schisaen Smntth 0 ee Ce Babatoticat $ 192 dichot (L.) Smith 67 | Tavodium horsfieldii Knight................ 157 digitata (L.) Swtz. 0... Ces : i Schizoloma Gaudich, St acouta! aiiidy | Maa ensifolium (Sw.) J. Sm... 84 ¥ (Zuce.) Pilger 166 Schizostachyum fenixii Gamble. 289 contortus (2) Griff. 166 Scirpodendron costatum Kurz... 195 virgata Wall. . 166 Sclerococcus laevigatus Bartl. 222 wallichiana Zuce. 166 Scrophulariaceae ..... a 221 Tectaria Cav, 16 Scyphularia Fée .. ne brooksii Copel. ......--0---.ee-- 137 pentaphylla (BI.) Fée... 81 cesatiana (C. Chr.) Copel. .. 76 Sebifera gluti Lour. 321 decurrens (Presl.) Copel. .... 76 Selagi 192 ferruginea (Mett.) Copel. .... 16 Semecarpus macrophylla Merr. ... 340 irregularis (Presl.) Copel. .... 16 micrantha? Merr. ... 340 leuzeana (Gaudich.) Copel... 77 ' Shorea Roxb. 268 malayensis (Christ.) Copel. .. 76 , balangeran (Korth.) Dyer...... 269 menyanthidis (Presl.) Copel. 76 contorta Vidal Bs 266 Copel. 16 eximia (Miq.) Scheffer. 276 | ‘Tetralopha (?) lenticellata C. B. Rob. 227 furfuracea Mic. ......... 276 (?) polillensis C. B. Rob... 226 guiso (Blanco) Blume.. - 272) Tetrastigma glabratum (Blume) malaanonan (Blanco) Blume.. 270 Planch. 210 mangachapoi (Blanco) Blume.. 282] 7p 210 mayapis Blume . 256 | Thelasis elongata Blume.. 198 negrosensis Foxw. 274 | Thoa edulis Blanco 175 philippi i 272 dula Blanco 175 polita Vidal 270 Thrixspermum pallidum (Blume) : polysperma (Blanco) Merr. . 277 Reichb. f. 198 reticulata F,-Vill. .................... 262 | Thymel. : 212, 345 squamata (Turcz.) Benth. & Tiliaceae 210 Hook, f. 211 | Trich Linn. 70 squamata (Turez.) Dyer.......... 275 acrosorum Copel. _.......... 72 bli Scheff 276 aphlebioides Christ. ........ 771 talura F.-Vill. 277 cupressoides Desv. < 71 teysmanniana Dyer 211, 279 densinervium Copel. _.... 71 vidaliana Brandis ... 273 dentatum v. d. B. (?).. 71 warburgii Gilg -... 278 grande Copel. . ee 70 Sol; 221 humile Forst. - 72 S tiaceae. 212 kingii Copel. ... 72 Spathiphyllum commutatum Schott... 195 latipinnum Copel. 71 Spermacoce Walp. 222 pallidum BI. ............ 71 philippensis Willd. ............. 222 trichophyllum Moore...... 70 philippinensis F.-Vill. ...... 222 estore ae cuspidata Radlk. ...... 182, 209 Stach ide 1 ica Blume............ a 6 Blume 835 Staurogyne debilis (Anders.) C. B. hirsutus C. B. Rob..... 335 Clarke 222 oblanceolatus C. B. Stenochlaena J. Sm. ........-.--.- 80 ROR as 337 _ kingii Copel. . 80 Tristania sp. 214 palustris (Burm.) Beda. 80° Turpentine 150 420 U Page. Umbelliferae 218 Uncaria philippinensis Elmer ............ 227 Uncinia Pers. 58 , Raoul var. au lacea Kiikenth. - 58 nona sympetala C. B. Rob. 5 oe se corniculata (Becc.) Foxw... 179 _ Urophyllum arboreum (Reinw.) Korth. . 227 glabrum Jack. .. 227 lucbanense Elmer . oe 227 Artleaobae:. 22.8... F899, 201, 299, 320 Urtica arborea Luzonis Camel. 20 arborescens Link. - 13 argentea Forst. - 16 baceifera Blanco .. 13 pitell Poir. 2 lebica BI. 5 hirta Blume ... se 9 Bl. 11 nivea Linn. i 4 tandra Roxb. 9] repanda Blume .. 15 Bl. 16 q igera Wall. a1 te issima Roxb. 4 villosa Blanco .... 8 Uvaria littoralis Blume 204 scandens C. B. Rob. ... 204 Vv Vandellia scabra Benth. ...................... Vatica Paes thera Blanco eximia MIG ecto mangachapoi Blanco .. Mig. Villebrunea frut rub Bl. trinervis Wedd. Vitaceae Vittaria J. E. Smith ta Swtz. scabricoma Copel. scolopendrina (Bory) Thw. . zosterifolia Willd. ........ Voacanga plumeriaefolia Elmer.. WW: Wallichia arborea Reinw. -................-- B.S Xanthophytum fruticulosum Reinw. .. Zingiberaceae Ee EE RE eee Dae Page. “221 » 281 282 276 282 276 227 Order No, 401. THE BONTOC IGOROT. By A. E. Jenks. 110 pages. 3 maps. 154 photographic plates. 9 figures, An interesting study; the result of almost a year’s residence among the Bontoe Igorots. Price $1 United States currency, postpaid. NEGRITOS OF ZAMBALES. By Witt Atax ‘REED. 62 photographic illustrations. 91 pages. An Storeng ethnological study of the pygmy blacks of Zambales. i _ Price $0.25, ; Unled Stans earny, postal. f OPELAND, EDWIN BI NGHAM. RAD cor) = bi ee pene Cyatheae species