1240 LEAFLETS OF PHILIPPINE BOTANY [Vor. IV, Arr. 67 
in the leaf axils or along the slender twigs, yellowish red, soft, 
nearly glabrous and wholly red when mature. 
Represented by number 10711, Elmer, Todaya (Mt. Apo), 
Mindanao, May, 1909. 
In very humid canyons along the Baruring river at 3500 
feet. It usually grows about trees near the ground and occa- 
sionally it sprawls over huge bowlders or attaches itself into 
rock crevices upon cliffs. The Bagobo name is ‘‘Magulipid.’’ 
Just what F. lancifolia Mig. is 1 do not know. Possibly it is 
one of the very pubescent forms of middle and northern Luzon. 
Ficus inaequifolia Elm. 
Field-note:—An erect tree or shrubby, 20 feet high and 6 
inches thick; branches numerous, grayish; wood dull white 
throughout, odorless and tasteless, rather brittle, plainly grained; 
bark grayish white and more or less blotched; leaves varying, the 
terminal usually larger, tips recurved, paler beneath, the main 
nerves whitish on the nether side; figsless than 0.5 inch through, 
solitary or in pairs from the leaf axils or from the axils of their 
scars, ascending upon yellowish green peduncles, the receptacle of 
the same color and only sparingly brown spotted, umbilieus small. 
Represented by number 10460, Elmer, Todaya (Mt. Apo), 
Mindanao, May, 1909. 
Along the Sibulan river at 2000 feet. This is the third time 
it-has been collected by the author, otherwise unknown. Quite 
typical and rare, in all of the three localities only a single plant 
was found. The Bagobos call it *Magulapi." 
Ficus microsphaera Warb. 
Field-note:—A straggling climber; stem 1 to 2 inches thick, 
irregularly rounded; branches widely spreading, slender and lax, 
mostly reclining or drooping; wood moderately hard and tough, 
sappy white, odorless and tasteless; bark dull green or grayish 
brown; leaves membranous, flat but with strongly recurved 
tips, much greener above; figs clustered both in the leaf axils or 
in the axils of the fallen leaves, globose, 0.25 inch in diameter, 
soft and red when mature, upon short similarly closed peduncles. 
Represented by number 10806, Elmer, Todaya (Mt. Apo), 
Mindanao, June, 1909. 
