210 SPECIES BLANCOANAE 
agrees absolutely with Turczaninow’s Hartighsea schizochitodes 
which was based on Cuming 1560 from Mindoro. The species 
is of local occurrence in parts of Luzon and Mindoro at low and 
medium altitudes and is still known as himamao, the native name 
cited by Blanco. 
Iliustrative specimen from Mount Maquiling, Laguna Province, 
Luzon, March, 1915, there known as himamao (Merrill: Species 
Blancoanae No. 856). 
Boswellia ? obliqua Blanco Fl. Filip. ed. 2 (1845) 243 (oblicua) (sp. nov.) ; 
ed. 3, 2 (1878) 87=? DYSOXYLUM sp. 
A species of doubtful status, although certainly meliaceous, 
and apparently a Dysoxylum. Fernandez-Villar erroneously 
reduced it to Ganophyllum faleatum Blume, and misled by this 
reduction I proposed the name Ganophyllum obliquum (Blanco) 
Merr. for the species, Blanco’s specific name being older than 
Blume’s. However, it is very manifest, from an examination 
of Blanco’s description, that Boswellia obliqua has nothing to 
do with Ganophyllum falcatum, so that the application of Blanco’s 
specific name to Blume’s species was an error. The native name 
cited by Blanco is pandapanda, but this is unknown to me and 
is probably little or not at all used to-day. 
Boswellia ? integra Blanco Fl. Filip. ed. 2 (1845) 242 (sp. nov.); ed. 3, 
2 (1878) 86=? DYSOXYLUM sp. 5 
Fernandez-Villar reduced this to Protium javanicum Burm. t; 
of the Burseraceae, a species that does not extend to the Philip- 
pines and one to which Blanco’s description does not at all apply. 
The description is very imperfect, but I think a Dysoxylum is 
intended. Blanco’s specimens were from the mountains of San 
Mateo, Rizal Province, Luzon, a region well known botanically, 
yet from the data available I am not yet able to reduce the species 
beyond its possible genus. The flowers are not described. 
CHISOCHETON Blume 
Trichilia pentandra Blanco Fl. Filip. (1837) 355 (sp. nov.) ; ed, 2 (1845) 
249; ed. 3, 2 (1878) 97=CHISOCHETON PENTANDRUS (Blanco) — 
Merr. in Govt. Lab. Publ. (Philip.) 27 (1905) 31 (Dasycoleum philip- 
pinum Turcz., Chisocheton philippinus Harms, C. ceramicus F.-Vill., 
non Migq.). 
Blanco’s description is not good, nor does it apply fully to 
our common Chisocheton philippinus Harms, but still there is 
no doubt as to the identity of the species he intended. The 
leaves are alternate and not “opposite,” as described by Blanco, ‘a 
and the calyx is truncate or but very obscurely 5-toothed; other- 
