154 ' FOXWORTHY. ' 
Tree or shrub^ bnuiclies spreading; leaves subdistichous, coriaceous; 
rather broad^ falcate^ acimiinate miicronate^ base acTimiTiate, 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 
cm 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, tnangular, carinate 
scales, which are crowded together toward the upper end of tlie branch ; 
ovule single, terminal. 
First collected in the Philippines by Whitehead in 1895, on one of the shoulders 
of Mount Ilaleou, Mindoro, next collected by Mr. :\Ierritt, For. Bur. Jf^Eo, June 
1000 in fruit, and finally by Mr. Merrill oUfJf in Nov. 1900. 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 INIatang 
in Sarawak, where it occurs at altitudes of from 600 to l,500,m and on Mount 
Halcon, Mindoro. It is also known from Lingga [Teysmann 69). 
The tree has much the habit of a Podocarpus. The leaves on young plants 
aTe sometimes as much as 6 cm long and are proportionately more slender, more 
lanceolate in shape than they are ,in adult material. 
2. Dacrydium elatum (Roxb.) Wall, ex Hook, in Jourm Bot. 2 (1843) 144, 
t. 2; Blume, Rumphia 3 (1847) 221, t. 172 B, f. 1, t. 172 G, f. 2; De Boer, Conif. 
Archip. Ind. (186G) 29 (descriptio valde extensa) ; Pari, in DC. Prodr. 16=^ 
(1808) 494; Hook. f. Fl. Brit. Ind. 5 (1890) 048; Rendle in Journ. Bot. 34 
(1890) 355; Foxworthy ex Merrill in Philip. Journ. Sci. 2 (1907) Bot. 257; 
Pilger in Engler Das Pflanzenre'ich 4= (1903) 51. 
Juniperus elata Roxb. Fl. Ind. 3 (1832) 838. 
Juniperus rigida Sieb. & Zucc. Fl. Jap. 2 (1842) 109, t. 125. 
Juniperus philippsiana Wall ex Gord. Vin. (1S58) 75. 
Dacrydium junghuhnii Miq. PI. Junghuhn. 1 (1851) 4; Fl. Ind. Bat. 2 (1859) 
1075. 
Tree lO-lo m tall; branches verticillate, the lower very long deflexed, 
the upper erect spreading, much branched. Juvenile leaves aciculate, 
subulate, more or less falcate and spreading, acute, subpungent, triangu- 
lar in s^tioh, 10-18 mm long;- adult leaves densely clothing the branch- 
lets, gradually smaller, more rigid, less curved, stifT, squarrose-sprcad- 
mg, subulate or narrowly linear, inserted on a spreading and slightly 
decurrent base, shortly acute or rarely obtuse, often obscurely tetragonal 
m section, carinate without, the sides sulcate more or less imprcssod- 
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, 
squaniifonn, densely imbricate, adpressed, 'rigid, triangular-Ovate,' apex 
slightly incurved, rather obtuge, carinate on dorsal face, 1-1.5 mm long. 
Male inflorescence terminal, narrowly cylindrical, dense, 5-7 mui long; 
anthers usually apiculate, from a broadly triangular base acute; cells 2, 
ovate-globose, dehiscing at the sides witliout. Fenuile ^owcvt^ at the apex 
