1324 LEAFLETS OF PHILIPPINE BOTANY [Vor. IV, Art. 69 
Type specimens 12319 and 12128, A. D. E. Elmer, Magal- 
lanes (Mt. Giting-giting), Province of Capiz, Island of Sibuyan, 
March and April respectively, 1910. 
In moist clay with a stony subsoil in woods at 750 to 1000 
feet altitude, along the Sinuban creek and Pauala river. 
Differing chiefly from typical F. luzonensis Merr. in being 
glabrous. The specimen by Padre F. Sanchez in the Herbarium 
Ateneo de Manila is most nearly like ours. 
7. NEOMORPHE. 
Ficus integrifolia Elm. 
Field-note:—Large tree; stem 2.5 feet thick, 50 feet high 
or higher, more or less branched from far below the middle; 
wood rather soft, concentrically ringed, odorless and tasteless; 
bark yellowish gray, smooth or lenticelled; branches spreading, 
amply rebranched, the suberect twigs comparatively short; 
petioles ascending, scurfy russet brown; leaves leathery or sub- 
chartaceous, horizontal or descending, shallowly folded upon 
the upper much deeper green surface, with strongly recurved 
tips; figs upon few inches long ligneous and branched tubercles, 
seattered along the trunk mainly, short obovoid, deep red, 0.5 
inch across; peduncles reddish, 1 inch long, 3-bracteate at the 
middle. 
Represented by number 12267, Elmer, Magallanes (Mt. 
Giting-giting), Sibuyan, April, 1910. 
Collected in red moist soil with a gravelly subsoil on wooded 
benches along the Patoo river at 750 feet. “Dolalog” is the 
vernacular Visayan name. 
Ficus latsoni Elm. 
Field-note:—Erect tree; stem 1 foot thick, 25 feet high; 
main branches arising from the middle or below it, ascending, 
the ultimate ones widely spreading; wood soft, whitish, odorless, 
with a distinct sweet taste, the concentric rings coarse; bark 
smooth, cinnamon brown, occasionally becoming conspicuously 
white blotched when old, 1 inch thick, latex copious; twigs 
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FÀ. 
