6/ 
2e 
female flowers only on our specimen, slenderly pedicellate, 
4 mm. long, subtended by a half united perianth whose 4 
obtuse segments are hyaline margined; achene elongate, ellip- 
soid, pale yellow, compressed, prominently keeled at both 
ends; style sublateral, slender, 0.5 to 1 mm. long. 
This golden yellow fruited and scandent fig species is allied 
to F. villosa Blm. Bijd. 441, 1825-6 and is primarily dis- 
tinguished from it by its glabrous receptacles which are not 
ovoid nor umbonate and always more than 6 mm. in 
diameter; and by its much shorter, non villous ebracteolate 
peduneles. Number 8025 was discovered in a small ravine 
of the pine belt one mile north of Baguio near the barrio 
of Lucban, and was the only climber observed. 
Vil. NEOMORPHE. 
Flowers unisexual; male and gall flowers in one set of 
receptacles; fertile female flowers with 2 stamens, the per- 
ianth inflated, of 3 or 4 membranous pieces; fertile female 
flowers smaller than the male or gall flowers; receptacles 
often very large, in fascicles from tubercles on the stem and 
larger branches; trees, rarely scandent, never epiphytal. 
28. F. integrifolia n. sp. A tree 8 m. high, widely branch- 
ing from near the middle; bark grayish, mottled with white, 
rather thick and scaling in plates; ultimate branches few and 
quite rigid. Leaves confined to the ends of the twigs, spreading, 
obovate to elliptie, varying in size, mostly 10 em. long and 
6 cm. wide, abruptly tapering into a short blunt apex, base 
acute, cinereous pubescent beneath as well as the younger 
branchlets, glabrous above, membranous, edges entire or 
somewhat undulate above the middle; veins of 3 primary 
pairs including the basal one, ascending, submarginally 
united above the middle, secondary ones not numerous, also 
submarginally united below the middle of the leaf; petioles 
unequal in length, the longer ones 3 em. long, rufous 
pubescent, persistent; bud scales acuminate, 1 cm. long, also 
pubescent. 
Receptacles paniculately clustered upon woody 1 to 2 em. 
long tubercles from branches of the size of a man’s wrist, 
short obovoid and much compressed, l to 2 em. in diameter, 
