210 ROBINSON. 
were piuscived. Tlie petioles are 25 to 30 cm in leiij^tli to the first leaflets, the 
rachis thereafter being in one 18 cm long, in the other nearly 40 cm long. At 
the first node, the lateral secondary petioles are over 10 cm long, with three 
leaflets; the apical node also bears three leaflets, the intermediate node in one 
leaf has a single leaflet^ on either side, in the other leaf bears three leaflets on u 
secondary petiole. The' veins of the under surface of the leaves are minutely 
pubescent, in the type material this is confined to the bases of the principal 
veins, while in Merrill 52^/0, from Lanang, Samar, which is otherwise quite 
the same as the PoHllo plant, the leaflets are glabrous. In both of these the 
leaves as a whole and tlie leaflets are larger than in the Negros specimens, but 
in shape, serration, and venation, essentially the same. 
Leea parva Elmer Leafl. Philip. Bot. 1 (1908) 317. 
Well matched by 685.',, fruiting, the species not otherwise known with cer- 
tainty, except from the type collection, from Tayabas. The petioles are about 
15 cm long, slightly exceeding those of the type, 10 to 12 cm; the petiolules of 
the leaflets, the terminal excepted, A'ary from 5 mm to I cm. . 
Tetrastigma glabratum (Blume) Planch, in DC. Monoffr. Phan. 5 (1887) 
430. 
A series of Philippine collections, including 10373, seems to fall under this 
species, but in the absence of material for comparison, the identification is best 
considered provisional. The chief difiference is that the calyx of the Polillo 
specimen is only obscurely lobed, and that the leaflets are not subcoriaceous; 
however, the latter objection does not apply to other collections apparently 
also referable here from Mindoro, Mindanao, and Palawan. These are mostly 
fruitiiig, none has a style as long as that of the Polillo plant, which is quite 
as described for this species by Planchon. The proportions of the flowers vary 
somewhat with age, so that it is a matter of some doubt whether another col- 
lection, lOm, should also be referred here, but it is probably a different species. 
Other species: Cl^sus adnata Roxb., 6877, mature leaves glabrescent. 
TILIACEAE. 
4 
Colona serratifoUa Cav., 9006, 10283, 10J,0G, local mime given as Jamn. 
MALVACEAE. 
Ahutilon ifidicttm (Linn.) G. Don, 90 ',8, local name murhas: Hibiscus rosa- 
suiensis Linn., 9236; H. surattensl^ Linn., 9S05 : Pariiium Hliaceum {Unn.) 
A. Juss-., 9062, local name halibago: 8ida acuta Burm., 10360; *V. retusa T.inn., 
9210: Urcna lohata Linn. (C7. sifivafa Linn.), 930',. 
r 
STERCULIACEAE. 
Heritiera Uttoralis Dryand., 9075: Melochia eorchorifoUa Linn., 9220; M. 
tndica (Houtt.) A. Gray, 0012: Steroulia cuneata R. Br., 6899, 10300: Theobroma 
cacao Linn., cult,, 9272. 
DILLENIACEAE. 
Saurauia whitfordil Merr. in Bur. Govt, Lab. PubL (Philip.) 35 (1006) 42. 
This species, otherwise known only from Tayabas, is represented by 10258. 
Other species: DiUnua phiUppinensis Rolfe, 0232, 103J,6, local name cotmon. 
THEACEAE. 
Thea monfana (Blanco) Merr., 9185, 
