247 LEAFLETS OF PHILIPPINE BoTANY [Vor. I, Art.14 
style slenderly tapering toward the usually pendulous apex, 
3 to 4 mm. long, characteristically curved, arising from the 
apex of the caruncle; true perianth 3 to 4 mm. long, 
membranous, gamophyllus, terminated by 2 to 3 fine lacinae. 
Specimen 9375, A. D. E. Elmer, Lucban, Province of 
Tayabas, Luzon, May, 1907. In light woods in a valley 
between Lucban and Tayabas along the old abandoned road- 
way. It belongs to the F. chrysolepis Mig. group and „was 
associated with its nearest alley, F. longipedunculata ( Merr.) 
Elm. In the field it is easily recognized from the latter by 
its shorter pubescent peduncles, bracts and receptacles. 
The figs are also more confined to the ends of the twigs, 
e. i, in the upper leaf axils. Dr. Otto Warburg collected his 
F. malunuensis at Malunu, Province of Isabela, Luzon, and 
it differs from my specimen in having shorter and pubes- 
cent stipules, shorter petioles and only one half as long 
peduncles; and leaves never larger than 16 cm. long by 8 
cm. wide. 
14. F. warburgii n. sp.—Scandent, 8 m. high upon 
trees, numerously branched and forming tangled bushes to- 
ward the top; stems 2.5 cm. in diameter, its wood soft and 
porous; bark of the rigid wiry branches light gray, with 
only a few lenticels, the younger portion brown and sub- 
glabrous or with a sparse brown pubescence. Leaves char- 
taceous, quite rigid, flat, chiefly at the ends of the branchlets, 
oblong to subelliptie or obovate, apex rounded, with a short 
broad subemarginate point, edges subentire, Jucid dark green 
above, lighter beneath and conspicuously yellowish green 
spotted or tassellate, glabrous, base subeuneate or obtusely 
rounded, about 5 cm. long, 2.5 em. across the widest por- 
tion; nerves prominent beneath, 5 to 7 on each side, the 
basal pair faint and much ascending or nearly parallel 
with the margin, the other obliquely straight, submarginally 
united, brown and shining, reticulations faint and minute; 
petiole 5 to 10 mm. long, brown, rather thick and fre- 
quently seurfy; bud scale dark brown, glabrous, 6 mm. long, 
sharply acuminate, convolute. 
Receptacles ascending, usually in pairs from the leaf 
axils or from the axils of fallen leaves, smooth, dark 
green and hard when collected, with minute lighter colored 
