1078 LEAFLETS OF PHILIPPINE BOTANY [Vor. III, Arr. 58 
what red, moderately hard, odorless and tasteless; leaves hor- 
izontally spreading from the ends of the twigs, 2 to 3 feet 
long; leaflets shining on both sides, deeper green above, nerves 
beneath yellowish green, ascending from the thick petiole, flat 
and only a trifle recurved; infrutescenc axillary, pendulous, 
the stalk 6 to 12 inches long, brown pubescent; nuts green, 
hard, with a short brown pubescence which when fully mature 
falls or rubs off, ovoidly elliptic, obscurely 3-angular, nearly 
1.5 inch long, 0.75 inch thick. The Bagobo specific name is 
**Ogat-somagasa.’’ 
Represented by number 10763, Elmer, Todaya (Mt. Apo), 
Mindanao, May, 1909. 
Possibly it should be referred under OC. costulatum Elm. 
for the stone is short and ovoid in outline instead of elongate 
ellipsoid. Its leaves are as in Merrüls plant. 
Canarium gracile Engl. 
Field-note for 10944:— Small tree, in dense woods along 
a steep slope of the Baracatan creek at 1750 feet altitude 5 
inches thick; branches mostly above the middle, spreading, 
quite numerous; wood moderately hard, odorless and taste- 
less, white throughout; bark yellowish gray, longitudinally 
scaling in several layers of rather thin parchment-like plates; 
leaves alternatingly scattered along the twigs; the rachis thick- 
ened at the base, otherwise round and slender; leaflets recurv- 
ed, nearly flat, deeper green above; inflorescence axillary, 
also green except the reddish corolla, shorter than the leaves; 
foliage and twigs when crushed with a strong turpentine odor. 
The flowering specimen was called by the Bagobos ‘‘Tuma- 
gasag", the fruiting “‘Bago.’’ 
Represented by numbers 10944 in flower and 11076 in 
fruit, Elmer, Todaya (Mt. Apo), Mindanao, June and July 
respectively, 1909. 
Canarium clementis perumbrinum Elm. n. var. 
Differs from the type in having fewer leaflets which are 
only one half as large, the lower ones especially the basal 
pair much more reduced in size, beneath rich and smoother 
