220 
The Philippine Journal of Science 
1915 
flowers which in anthesis are about 3 cm in diameter. It somewhat 
resembles Eugenia samarensis Merr., but is entirely different from that 
species. Its true alliance seems to be with Eugenia aherniana C. B. Rob., 
but it is very different from the other species placed in this alliance. Its 
local name in Samar is damol. 
Dedicated to G. J. Kamel, S. J., one of the earliest investigators of the 
Philippine flora and perhaps the most able botanist who studied the 
Philippine flora during the Spanish regime. 
EUGENIA LLANOSI I sp. nov. § Jambosa. 
Arbor circiter 10 m alta, ramis ramulisque teretibus; foliis 
numerosis, confertis, coriaceis, ellipticis vel oblongo-ellipticis, us- 
que ad 5 cm longis, coriaceis, in siccitate brunneis, nitidis, 
utrinque angustatis, basi acutis, apice obtusis vel acutis, nervis 
utrinque circiter 8, tenuibus; inflorescentiis terminalibus, brevi- 
bus, paucifloris, floribus 4-meris, magnis, confertis, 3.5 ad 4 cm 
diametro. 
A tree about 10 m high, entirely glabrous. Branches and 
branchlets terete, smooth, brownish. Leaves opposite, numerous, 
rather crowded on the branchlets, elliptic to oblong-elliptic, coria- 
ceous, brownish when dry, somewhat shining, 3 to 5 cm long, 2 
to 2.8 cm wide, subequally narrowed to the acute base and to 
the obtuse or merely acute apex ; lateral nerves about 8 on each 
side of the midrib, not prominent. Inflorescence terminal, short, 
few- (usually 3-) flowered, the rachis less than 1 cm in length. 
Flowers large, 4-merous, the buds obovoid, brown when dry. 
Calyx widely funnel-shaped, about 1.3 cm in diameter and 1 cm 
long in anthesis, the lobes four, 4 to 7 mm wide and about 3 mm 
long. Petals 4, free, orbicular, about 1 cm in diameter. Stamens 
indefinite, about 1.5 cm long. The flower, in anthesis, white, 
3.5 to 4 cm in diameter. 
Luzon, Benguet Subprovince, near Baguio, Merrill 9704, May 24, 1914, 
in thickets, limestone region, altitude about 1,300 meters. 
A species in the group with Eugenia everettii C. B. Rob. and E. xantho- 
phylla C. B. Rob., well characterized and differentiated by its crowded leaves 
which are very much smaller that in those species, and its terminal, short, 
usually 3-flowered inflorescences. Dedicated to Father A. Llanos, colleague 
of Father Blanco and the author of several papers on the Philippine flora. 
EUGENIA LONGISTYLA sp. nov. § Jambosa. 
Arbor circiter 10 m alta, glabra, ramis ramulisque teretibus; 
foliis oblongis ad oblongo-ellipticis, subcoriaceis, usque ad 13 cm 
longis, utrinque subaequaliter angustatis, basi acutis, apice acu- 
minatis, supra brunneis, nitidis, subtus pallidis, nervis utrinque 
8 vel 9, distantibus, subtus valde prominentibus, anastomosan- 
tibus, reticulis primariis laxis, distinctis, secundariis obsoletis; 
