1246 LEAFLETS OF PHILIPPINE BoTANY [Vor. IV, Arr. 67 
. This rare species is only known besides the type by ` 
a specimen from mount Mariveles. All of these three speci- 
mens are alike in fruits and leaf character. Cuming 1932 or 
F. nuda Mq. is more likely to be what King considers the com- 
moner F. benjamina Linn. with deep red globose fruits. To 
this same alliance belongs F. haematocarpa (Mig.) or Urostigma 
haematocarpum Mig. in Lond. Journ. VI; 584. 
Ficus infectoria caulocarpa (Miq.) King. F. stipulosa Miq. 
Ann. Mus. Bot. Ludg. Bat. III; 287. Urostigma caulocarpum 
Mig. Fl. Ind. Bat. I; 334. 
Field-note for 11014:—An epiphytic strangler, starting 
in the axils of large tree limbs and ultimately forming a mess . 
work of stems and roots about its host; branches widely spread- 
ing, twigs slender and ascending; wood soft, dirty white, odorless 
and tasteless; bark very smooth, brown and gray mixed; leaves 
horizontally spreading, coriaceous, nearly flat, smooth on both 
sides, deeper green above, their petiole and main nerves yellow- 
ish white; figs in pairs from the axils of fallen leaves beneath the 
foliage, ascending upon green peduncles, obovoid, smooth, flat 
across the umbilicus, yellowish when fully mature and with 
bright red spots. 
Represented by numbers 11014 and 11042, Elmer, Todaya 
(Mt. Apo), Mindanao, June, 1909. 
In dry woods of a ridge along the Baracatan creek at the 
upper limit of the cogon formation at 1500 feet. 
All our Philippine material comes under the species with 
sessile fruits, under the variety when its fruits are short pedi- 
celled. Both of Miquels names are quite the same as Roxburgh’s 
older name of this very charaeteristie species. The Bagobo 
name is ‘‘Magamomo.”’ 
Ficus calophylloides Elm. n. sp. 
.À large widely spreading tree; trunk 1.5 m. thick, terete, 
20 m. high; main branches divergently spreading, the ultimate 
ones numerous, rigid and relatively short; bark on the twigs 
brown and densely covered with lighter brown lenticels. Leaves 
alternatingly scattered, usually toward the end of the short 
stout twigs, coriaceous, nearly flat, darker green and more shin- 
