217 



usually scn'iitc. sti'ouuly cartihiuiiious. IJaceines simple, the pedicels 

 less tliaii 1 inui. long-; l)racts foliaceons, ovate-lanceolate, 2 to 3 iiiiii. 

 long, sparingly scabrous-pilose; bracteoles 2, membranous, linear, spar- 

 ingly pilose, 1 to 1.5 mm. long. Calyx 2 mm. long, the tube manifestly 

 papillose-punctate, 8-ribbed, 1 mm. long, the ribs scabrous, the lobes 4, 

 erect, ovate-lanceolate, acute, 1 mm. long, navicular, somewhat pilose on 

 the keel. Stamens 4; anthers 1.3 mm. long. Fruit grayish, somewhat 

 shining. 



•Luzon, Province of Benguet, Baguio to Ambuklao (4357 Merrill) October 24, 

 1005: District of Lepanto, Suyoc to Cervantes (4444 Merrill) October 'M), 1905; 

 ^roTint Data (4553 Merrill) November 4, 1904. On dry, open, grassy slopes in 

 thin pine forests, 1,500 to 2,100 m. 



(3) Halorrhagis micrantha (Tliunb.) R. Br. Scbindler 1. c. 42. 



Neoros, Canlaon Volcano (Banks) March, 1902. Mindanao, District of Davao, 

 Mount Apo (1050 Copeland) April, 1904; (1436 Copeland) October, 1904, det. 

 Rolfe. "Grows all over the summit but abundant only about pools, 2,600 to 

 3.000 m." Copeland. 



A species not previously reported from the Philippines, extending from Bengal 

 lo .Japan, INIalaya, Australia, and New Zealand. 



MYRIOPHYLLUM Linn. 



Myriophyllum spicatum Linn. 8chindler 1. c. 90. 



JMi.NDAXAO, Lake Lanao. Camp Keithley (450 J\[rs. Clemens) April, 190(1. 

 Altitude about 800 m. 



No species of the genus has previously been reported from the Philippines. 

 Widely distributed in the tropical and temperate regions of the world, but not 

 recorded by Schindler from the Malayan region. 



ARALIACE.E. 



ACANTHOPANAX Decne. et Planch. 



Acanthopanax trifoliatum (Linn.). Zunthoxylum trifuliutum Linn. Sp. PI. 



(1753) 270. Panax aculeatum Ait. Hort.'K.ew. Z (1789) 448. Acanthopanax 



aeuleatiim Seem. Journ. Bot. 5 (1867) 238; Forbes & Hemsl. Journ. Linn. 



Soc. Bot. 23 (1888) 229. Aralia trifoliata Meyen. 

 Luzon, Province of Benguet. Bugias (4661 Merrill) October 28, 1905. In 

 thickets at an altitude of about 1,500 m. 



An interesting addition to our knowledge of the relationship of the Philippine 

 flora to that of the Asiatic continent. The above specimen agrees very closely 

 with material of this species supplied me by the director of the Botanic Garden, 

 Hongkong, with Formosan specimens received from the Imperial University, Tokyo, 

 and with sterile specimens in Herb. Bureau of Science from a cultivated plant 

 in the Botanical Garden at Buitenzorg, Java. The Philippine plant is, however, 

 a scandent shrub, while in all the references to Acanthopanax aculeatum Seem., 

 and synonyms of that species which I have been able to consult, the species is 

 desciibed as a shrub or small tree. However, T can not, from the descriptions 

 and material available, find any other characters by which the Philippine plant 

 can be distinguished, and have accordingly referred it to the above species, which 

 extends from Japan and Formosa to China and Eastern India. 



44772 4 



