66 MR. C. B. CLARKE ON THE 
Ficus cnAVATA, Wall., var. TRACHYCARPA. 
Kohima, alt. 5000 feet. 
North Muneypore, alt. 4000 feet. 
F. OPPOSITIFOLIA, Roxb. 
Kohima, alt. 4000 feet. 
F. NIGRESCENS, King [n. 41954]. i 
Kohima, alt. 5800 feet. 
Figured and described by Dr. G. King in his Monograph of 
Indian Ficus just published. 
F. HIRTA, Vahl. 
Kohima, alt. 4750 feet. 
Ficus, sp. [n. 41308]. 
Kohima, alt. 5000 feet. 
Fıcvs, sp. [n. 42077]. 
North Muneypore, alt. 3000 feet. 
Fıcvs, sp. [n. 41954]. 
North Muneypore, alt. 5000 feet. 
Fıcvs, sp. [n. 41817]. 
Kohima, alt. 6000 feet. 
The above Ficus specific names I owe to Dr. G. King. 
AnTOCARPUS LacoocHa, Roxb., var. 
Kohima, alt. 2500 feet. 
Fruit much eaten, even by European denizens. Dr. King 
thinks this may be separable as a species. 
CoNOCEPHALUS, sp. 
Kohima, alt. 4500 feet. 
PILEA MINUTA, sp. nova. 
Planta 1-2 uncias alta, tenuissima. Folia 4-4 unciam longa, 
opposita, ovata, sepe acuta, minute sparsim pilosa, a cystolithis 
ornata. Flores masculi foemineique dense glomerati; glomeruli 
in pedunculis filiformibus longi 0—] unciam sustenti. Achmnium 
anguste, ellipsoideum, brunneum, fere leve, 
North Muneypore, alt. 5500 feet [n. 41788]. 
This most minute plant is not P. peploides, Hook. et Arn. ; the 
leaves are much thinner, more acute, less 3-nerved, smoother ; 
the minute cymes are slenderly pedicelled. Nor is it P. mi 
micro- 
phylla, Liebm., a small species now found in several places in 
