VIII, c, 6 Merrill: Plantae Wenzelianae 377 
4 mm in diameter, 3-lobed at the apex, the lobes recurved, 
narrowly oblong, obtuse or slightly retuse, 2 to 2.5 mm long. 
Anthers 8, sessile, alternating v^^ith the lobes and inserted between 
them, 1.5 mm long. Disk glabrous, about 3 mm long, truncate, 
prominent. Ovary very densely villous as is the lower 6 to 8 
mm of the style, the upper part of the style glabrous ; stigma 
disk-like, about 1.5 mm in diameter. Fruit yellow or red, 
globose, glabrous or nearly so, when dry 3 to 3.5 cm in diameter, 
mostly 3-celled, very tardily dehiscing, the pericarp very thickly 
coriaceous, 
Leyte, Dagami, C. A. Wenzel 77 (type), March, 1913, in flower, Wenzel 
10, June, 1913, Bur. Sci. 152^1 Ramos, August, 1912, the latter two with 
fruits. 
A very characteristic species, allied manifestly to Dysoxylum cumin</- 
ianum C. DC, D. cauliflorum Hiern, D. ramifiorum Miq., and D. caulosta- 
chyum Miq., from all of which it is distinguished by its unusually large 
flowers. 
DYSOXYLUM VERRUCULOSUM sp. nov. (§ Eudyspxylum.) 
Arbor circiter 25 m alta, plus minusve puberula vel subglabra ; 
foliis ut videtur alternis, circiter 40 cm longis, 6-jugis, foliolia 
suboppositis, usque ad 13 cm longis, oblong-ellipticis, opacis, 
chartaceis, in siccitate subolivaceis, utrinque densissime verrucu- 
losis, acuminatis, basi inaequilateralibus, nervis utrinque 10 ad 
12; paniculis axillaribus, ramosis, circiter 20 cm longis, ramis 
paucis ; floribus numerosis, 4-meris, circiter 8 mm longis, petalis 
extus dense puberulis, liberis; ovario puberulo. 
A tree about 25 m high, more or less puberulent or subgla- 
brous. Leaves apparently alternate, about 40 cm long, the rachis 
sparingly puberulent; leaflets 6 pairs, subopposite or the lower 
and upper pair opposite the intermediate ones subaltemate, . 
gradually elongated upward, oblong-elliptic, chartaceous, gla- 
brous, up to 13 cm long and 5 cm wide, somewhat falcate, the 
apex prominently acuminate, the base very inequilateral, when 
dry very densely verruculose on both surfaces, pale-olivaceous; 
lateral nerves 10 to 12 on each side of the midrib, distinct* 
on the lower surface, scarcely anastomosing, the reticulations 
obsolete or nearly so; petiolules about 5 mm long. Panicles 
apparently axillary, panicled, branched, the branches few, the 
lowest one up to 10 cm long, the entire panicle up to 20 cm in 
length, usually with but 3 or 4 primary branches, more or 
less puberulent, the flowers numerous, flesh-colored, racemosely 
arranged along the panicle-branches, somewhat fascicled at the 
