Ficus. | URTICACEE. 441 
beneath covered with a very fugaceous tawny or greyish wool, also in 
a dried state remaining green or yellowish green, 3- or often remotely 
5-7-nerved above the base, the lateral nerves numerous, parallel, 
the net-veination lax and conspicuous ; receptacles by pairs in the 
axils of the leaves, sessile, globular, the size of a small cherry, 
bright red, while young covered with a fugaceous woolly tomentum, 
glabrescent ; bracts small, 
Has.—In the Eng and low forests of Martaban, east of Tounghoo; Ava.— 
Fr. Apr.—l.—SS.=Lat. Dil. 
3. F. pilosa, Rwdt.—An evergreen large tree with a large 
spreading crown, all younger parts covered with a villous-woolly, 
fugaceous, rusty or golden-coloured tomentum; stipules tawny or 
golden villous ; leaves from obovate-oblong and elliptically oblong 
to almost oblong, on a woolly glabrescent strong petiole 1-1} in. 
long, rounded or obtuse at the base, 4-10 in. long, bluntish api- 
culate, entire or slightly waved, coriaceous, beneath while young 
covered with a dense, fugaceous, tawny or golden woolly tomentum, 
when full-grown glabrous, regularly turning brown in drying, 
strongly 3-nerved at the base, and often with 2 additional thinner 
nerves, the lateral nerves rather irregular, strong, and anastomosing 
towards the margin, the lax net-veination conspicuous ; receptacles 
sessile, by pairs in the axils of the leaves, depressed-globular, the 
size of a small or large cherry, bright red, while young cloth 
with a woolly tomentum, soon becoming quite glabrous, 3-bracted 
at the base, the bracts rather large, broad and rounded, almost 
glabrous. 
Has.—Upper Tenasserim.—Fr. Feb. 
5-9 in. long, entire, coriaceous, glabrous, in drying uring brown 
or reddish brown beneath, hardly 3-nerved, but with 2 short diverg- 
Has.—Tenasserim. 
5. F. laccifera, Roxb.; Bedd. Sylv. Madr., 223 ; Brand. For. Fl., 
Mc Agomig pol tree (80—100+4+40—60 + 6—15), shedding 
leaves in H.S., of very various habit, either a simple-stemmed tree 
