VI. EUSYCE. 
b.—Receptacles mostly in fascicles from stem and branch- 
es. 
VII. NEOMORPHE. 
I. PALAEOMORPHE. 
Male flowers with 1 stamen and a rudimentary pistil 
occupying the same receptacles as the gall flowers; fertile 
female flowers alone in another set of receptacles; perianth 
of fertile females usually gamophyllous, 4 or 5-cleft, rarely 
of separate pieces; small trees, erect, or subscandent shrubs. 
1. F. celebica Blm. Bijd. 471, 1825-6. In the vicinity 
of Baguio this typical species is common in hardwood thickets 
and along streamlets of the pine region at 1600 m. altitude. 
It is a lax, numerously branched shrub with smooth and 
yellowish bark. Mature receptacles are soft in texture, yellowish 
red, the size of a cranberry, and persistently covered with a 
brown semihispid pubescence. Cuming collected in these Islands 
(particular locality unknown) a specimen which Miquel des- 
cribed in Lond. Journ. Bot. 8; 452, 1848 as F. lancifolia, 
but which King subsequently reduced to a synonym of this 
species. Outside from these Islands it is reported from Perak 
and the Celebes. Both my numbers 8000 and 8029 were 
collected in the same locality. 
a F. fastigiata n. sp. A shrub, 1 to 2 m. high, with 
numerous and fastigiate branches; wood moderately hard, 
covered by smooth brown bark. Leaves equilateral, 3 to 6 
em. long, 1 to 15 mm. wide, lanceolate or ovate lanceolate, 
acute at the base, apex long tapering or caudate, margin 
obscurely dentate above the middle, glabrous but finely scabrous, 
especially beneath, coriaceous, usually conduplieate upon its 
ventral side; veins conspicuous, 3 from the base, the 3 to 5 
primary pairs often nearly at right angles to the prominent 
midvein, their ends connected below the margin; petioles 
as well as the youngest twigs scabrous, 3 to 5 mm. in length, 
brownish; stipules equalling the petioles, glabrous, setaceously 
acuminate. 
Receptacle bearing a few scattered bracts, spheroidal in 
shape, 6 mm. in diameter, scabrous, with its umbilicus 
