ECEMBER 23, 1908] A Fascicug or Sours Nganos Fias 541 
Mountains, Province of Negros Oriental, Negros, June, 1908. 
A shrub in thickets on dry hot banks of the Bonyao 
river at 1200 feet. In this locality not at all common. 
So far its range extends from middle Luzon southward 
through Leyte. 
Ficus lucbanensis Elm. Leaf. Philip. Bot. 1; 254, 1908. 
Specimen 9454, A. D. E. Elmer, Dumaguete, Cuernos 
Mountains, Province of Negros Oriental, Negros, March, 
1908. 
Collected in damp woods near a spring at 4000 feet. 
To me it does not seem typical. See remarks under F. 
benguetensis negrosensis Elm. 
Ficus hauili Blco. Fl. Filip. ed. 1; 884, 1837. 
Specimen 10430, A. D. E. Elmer, Dumaguete, Cuernos 
Mountains, Province of Negros Oriental, Negros, June, 
1908. 
This is probably the commonest species in the Philip- 
pines and has the most extensive range latitudinally and 
altitudinally. Known to some of the Tagalogs as ''Hauili."' 
How F. didymophylla Warb. differs from this earlier species 
is not yet clear to me. Probably Warburg’s species should 
be considered as a synonym of Blanco's name. 
Ficus quercifolia humilis (Roxb.) King in Ann. Roy. 
Bot. Gard. Cale. 1; 78, 1887. 
Specimen 9507, A. D. E. Elmer, Dumaguete, Cuernos 
Mountains, Province of Negros Oriental, Negros, March, 
1908. i 
Very common in thickets and light woods along streams 
and in low bamboo gulches at 1000 feet. 
My number 7179 from Palo, Leyte, is tbe same species. 
But 7447 from Lucban, Tayabas province, Luzon, and which 
I referred under this same name on page 251 of the Leaf- 
lets, is a small leaved form of F. blepharostoma Warb. That 
numbers 7179 and 9507 are F. cumingii Miq., I am not 
quite ready to admit. Dr. Warburg also found rudimentary 
ovaries in the staminate flowers of his specimens. See Perkin’s 
Frag. Fl. Philip. 198, 1905. ‘‘Pili’’ is the vernacular name. 
