CATALOGUE AND DESCRIPTION OF FIGS. 249 
Leker Ingir.—A Smyrna fig rey uiring caprification. Color of skin greenish-ochre. 
Not handsome. Skin with dark specks. Stem and neck very short or 
absent. Imported by Roeding. (See Smyrna figs, p. 278.) 
Levant—Turqui.—Very large, oblong; skin white: leaves laciniate. (All accord- 
ing to Duhamel. ) 
Levenssana—Ficus smithii Risso: Ficus sylvestris var. alpestris Geny.—Size 
medium; 2} inches diameter, globular, flattened; skin hard, glossy, adhering to 
the pulp; color of skin pistachio green on thestalk end, brownish violet on the 
apex side. Eyered, surrounded by a violet iris; pulp bright red. Very agree- 
able taste. Common at Levens, near Nice, France. 
Fia. 71.—Lampeira fig. 
Lipari— Petite Blanche Ronde; De Lipari; Blanquette; Blanquetto and Esquillarello 
(Provence); Verte Petite; Bouton du Guétre.—Size very small, the smallest of all 
figs of the Ficus carica species—about three-fourths inch to 1 inch long. Glob- 
ular, with longitudinal ridges: stalk one-eighthinchlong. Color green, turning 
yellow or whitish at maturity, with a thin bloom. Pulp pale rose, opaline, or 
palecoppery. Ina warm climate asweet and good fig. (According to Hogg.) 
Liviana—PIssALuTrTo BIANco. 
Lob Ingir— Bulletin Smyrna; Commercial Smyrna; Erbeghli; Erbelli; Erbeili.—- 
Fruit sulphur yellow when ripe. this color lasting only two days. Pulp pa'e 
honey colored without red. Form of fig decidedly flattened, as an onion. 
