438 .MKUUILI.. 
Hose, Bishop. A Catalogue of the Ferns of Borneo and some of the atljacent 
islands which have been revorded up to the pre-oiit time. {Journ. f^fraifs 
Branch R. A. Soc. 32 (1899) pp. 31-H4.) 
In thi?i paper 430 species are enumerated, many of which extend to the 
Philippines. 
Loher, A. Lophopetaluni toxicum Loher. {Icon. Buyor. 1 (1897) pp. 5G-G7, 
plate 16.) . 
Lopho pet alum toxicuin, from Luzon, figured and described, with a note 
regarding the use of its bark by the Negritos as a 80\nee of arrow poison. 
Massee, George. Fungi Exotici, IT, Philippine Islands. {Keiv Bull. (1899) 
p. 176.) 
Nine species of fungi are recorded from Loher*s Philippine collections, 
of which one, Favolus purpureus, is described as new. 
Masters, Maxwell T. A General View of the Genus Pinus. {Joitrn. Linn. Soc. 
Bot, 35 (1904) pp. 560-659, plate? 4.) 
In this paper 73 species are considered, two of which are Philippine, 
Pinxis insularis Endl., endemic, and P. merkusii Jungh. et DeVr., Luzon, 
Sumatra, Borneo and { ?) the Shan States. 
Pearson, H. H. W. On some Species of Dischidia with Double Pitchers. {Journ. 
Linn. Soc. Bot. 35 (1902) pp. 375-390 with one plate.) 
On page 377 Diftrh'idia pectenoides Pearson, is described from Luzon. 
Rehder, Alfred. Synopsis of the Genus Lonicera. [Kept. Mo. Bot. Gard. 14 
(1903) pp. 27-232, plates 20.) 
Of this genus, L50 species, with many varieties and forms, are recognized, 
none of which, however, occur in the Pliilippines. Since the publication 
of the work, however, one or two species of Lonicera ITave been found in 
northern Luzon. 
Ridley, H. N.. New or little known Malayan Plants. {Journ. Straits Branch 
R. A. Soc. 44 (1905) pp. 189-211.) 
Many species are described from different parts of the Malayan l*cninsula, 
Borneo, etc., including one from the Pliilippines, Calamus lindeni Hort., 
page 200, based on a specimen from the Philippines cultivated in the 
Botanic Gardens, Singapore. On page 199 Joinvillca malayana is also 
described from material collected in Perak, Selangor and Sarawak, also 
being found in Palawan. (See Merrill in Philip. Journ. Sd. 1 (1900) 
Snppl. 181.) In the same work two other papers by the same author are 
published, both bearing more or less on Philippine botany, "The Gesneraceffi 
of the Malay PeninsiTia" 43 (1905) pp. 1-92, and "The Aroids of Borneo" 
44 (1905) pp. 169-188. 
Ridley, H. N. The Flora of Singapore. [Journ. Straits BrancJi R. A. Soc. 33 
(1900) pp. 27-196.) 
An enumeration of all the flowering plants and vascular cryptogams known 
to occur on the Island of Singapore, over 1,900 species being recorded from 
an area of a little o^'or 200 ^ijuare mik-s. ^Muny of the species enumerated 
extend to the Philippines. 
Ridley, H. N. Grasses and Sedges of Borneo. {Journ. Straits Branch R. A. Soc. 
46 (1906) pp. 215-228.) 
■ An enumeration of the Cyperacea' and Graminca' in recent Bornean collec- 
tions, 87 species of grasses and 99 species of sedges being enumerated, both 
numbers much smaller than in the corresponding groups in the Philippines. 
Many of the species enumerated extend to the Philippines. 
