2392 LEAFLETS OF PHILIPPINE BOTANY [Von VII, Arr. 112 
condition are usually in the mornings following clear cold 
nights or after heavy rains. 
Group IV 
(Ficus nota Blco.) 
Ficus satterthwaitei Elm. 
Field-note:—Small tree; stem 8 inches thick, 20 feet 
high, branched from the middle, subterete and suberect; wood 
soft, sappy white, watery and heavy, with coarse concentric 
rings; bark smooth or roughened with lenticels, containing 
latex, hypodermis green, otherwise whitish; main branches 
ascending, ultimately rebranched, the ascending twigs green; 
leaves descending, submembranous, diverse in size, easily 
wilting and sides turning upon the upper darker green sur- 
face; fruits upon few to several inches long and branched 
tubercles, from the stem only; the tubercles rigid, scar 
roughened and brown; figs upon pendant dull green nearly 
2 inches long flexible stalks, 1.5 inch across, 0.75 inch deep, 
dark green but upon maturity dull yellow, sprinkled with 
brown lenticels, the umbilical scales dirty brown or blackish. 
**Tabog”” in Manobo. 
Represented by number 13899, Elmer, Cabadbaran (Mt. 
Urdaneta), Province of Agusan, Mindanao, September, 1912. 
Standing among bowlders of the Catangan creek bed at 
8000 feet altitude. 
Ficus repandifolia Elm. 
Field-note for 13681:—Small tree or tree-like shrub; stem 
5 inches thick, terete but crooked, 20 feet high or less, 
branched from the middle or below it; wood soft, sappy 
white, concentrically ringed, odorless and tasteless; bark mottled, 
smooth, ochroleucus in the middle portion, the inner side whitish 
and with latex; main branches widely spreading and crookedly 
rebranched; twigs few, ascending, slender; leaves coriaceous, 
radially spreading and pendant as in certain Araliaceous plants, 
shallowly curved upon the upper much darker green surface, 
tips abruptly recurved, veins beneath much paler green, turn- 
ing dark reddish brown upon drying; fruits clustered from 
