64 
The Philippine Journal of Science 
1916 
or tomentose. Branches and branchlets terete, brownish to gray- 
ish. Leaves oblong, coriaceous, rather pale or pale-brownish- 
olivaceous when dry, entire, somewhat shining, quite glabrous 
on both surfaces or the very young ones slightly fulvous- 
pubescent on the midrib and nerves beneath, 10 to 20 cm long, 
3 to 6.5 cm wide, the apex rather prominently acuminate, base 
obtuse to rounded, sometimes very obscurely cordate; lateral 
nerves 8 to 10 on each side of the midrib, not impressed on the 
upper surface, very prominent on the lower surface, curved- 
ascending, anastomosing, the primary reticulations fine, distinct, 
subparallel ; petioles stout, about 5 mm long, when young fulvous- 
pubescent, soon becoming quite glabrous; stipules foliaceous, 
coriaceous, similar in texture and appearance to the leaves, 
lunate, strongly falcate, acuminate, about 1 cm long and 4 mm 
wide, when young very slightly pubescent, becoming glabrous. 
Male spikes short, cylindric, dense, 1 to 2 cm long, axillary and 
in the axils of fallen leaves, one or two to several in each axil, 
somewhat pubescent. Sepals 3, obovate to narrowly obovate, 
rounded, obtuse, slightly pubescent, about 1 mm long. Stamens 
2, their filaments long-exserted, about 2.5 mm long. Female in- 
florescences racemose, 1 to 3 cm long, densely fulvous-tomentose, 
solitary or several from each axil, peduncled, or at least without 
flowers in the lower part, the pedicels stout, fulvous-pubescent, 
about 1 mm long. Calyx fulvous-tomentose, the sepals 5, oblong- 
ovate, acuminate, about 1 mm long. Ovary and styles black when 
dry, glabrous, or the ovary with very few, scattered, fulvous 
hairs, about 2 mm long, ellipsoid ; styles 3, stout, spreading, nearly 
3 mm long, cleft to about the middle into two stout arms. 
Sarawak, Baram District, Baram, Hose UO, 92 (type), 278, March, 1895, 
and October, 1894; near Kuching, 5th mile, Rock Road, Native collector 
558 (Bur. Sci.), July 27, 1911. 
A species manifestly closely allied to Aporosa lunata Kurz, from which 
it differs, however, in many characters, notably in its glabrous branches 
and leaves, and much fewer nerves which are not impressed on the upper 
surface. From Aporosa benthamiana Hook, f., to which it is apparently 
even more closely allied, it differs notably in its much smaller, fewer- 
nerved leaves. 
APOROSA SUBCAUDATA sp. nov. 
Frutex vel arbor subtus foliis ramulis inflorescentiisque dense 
ferrugineo-pubescentibus ; foliis subcoriaceis, oblongis, integris, 
usque ad 20 cm longis, apice prominente subcaudato-acuminatis, 
basi acutis, nervis utrinque 9 ad 11, subtus valde prominentibus ; 
spicis 2 numerosis, 1 ad 2 cm longis, fasciculatis, axillaribus et 
e axillis defoliatis; sepalis 4, leviter pubescentibus ; filamentis 2. 
