VIII, C, 6 
Merrill: Plantae Wenzelianae 
377 
4 mm in diameter, 3-lobed at the apex, the lobes recurved, 
narrowly oblong, obtuse or slightly retuse, 2 to 2.5 mm long. 
Anthers 8, sessile, alternating with the lobes and inserted between 
them, 1,5 mm long. Disk glabrous, about 3 mm long, truncate, 
prominent. Ovary very densely villous as is the lower 6 to 8 
mm of the style, the upper part of the style glabrous; stigma 
disk-like, about 1.5 mm in diameter. Fruit yellow or red, 
globose, glabrous or nearly so, when dry 3 to 3.5 cm in diameter, 
mostly 3-celled, very tardily dehiscing, the pericarp very thickly 
coriaceous. 
Leyte, Dagami, C. A. Wenzel 77 (type), March, 1913, in flower, Wenzel 
10, June, 1913, Bur. Sci. 152H Ramos, August, 1912, the latter two with 
fruits. 
A very characteristic species, allied manifestly to Dysoxylum cuminy- 
ianum C. DC., D. caulifiorum Hiern, D. ramiftorum Miq., and D. caulosta- 
chyum Miq., from all of which it is distinguished by its unusually large 
flowers. 
DYSOXYLUM VERRUCULOSUM sp. nov. (§ Eudysoxylum.) 
Arbor circiter 25 m alta, plus minusve puberula vel subglabra ; 
foliis ut videtur alternis, circiter 40 cm longis, 6-jugis, foliolis 
suboppositis, usque ad 13 cm longis, oblong-ellipticis, opacis, 
chartaceis, in siccitate subolivaceis, utrinque densissime verrucu- 
losis, acuminatis, basi inaequilateralibus, nervis utrinque 10 ad 
12; paniculis axillaribus, ramosis, circiter 20 cm longis, ramis 
paucis; floribus numerosis, 4-meris, circiter 8 mm longis, petalis 
extus dense puberulis, liberis; ovario puberulo. 
A tree about 25 m high, more or less puberulent or subgla- 
brous. Leaves apparently alternate, about 40 cm long, the rachis 
sparingly puberulent; leaflets 6 pairs, subopposite or the lower 
and upper pair opposite the intermediate ones subalternate, 
gradually elongated upward, oblong-elliptic, chartaceous, gla- 
brous, up to 13 cm long and 5 cm wide, somewhat falcate, the 
apex prominently acuminate, the base very inequilateral, when 
dry very densely verruculose on both surfaces, pale-olivaceous; 
lateral nerves 10 to 12 on each side of the midrib, distinct 
on the lower surface, scarcely anastomosing, the reticulations 
obsolete or nearly so; petiolules about 5 mm long. Panicles 
apparently axillary, panicled, branched, the branches few, the 
lowest one up to 10 cm long, the entire panicle up to 20 cm in 
length, usually with but 3 or 4 primary branches, more or 
less puberulent, the flowers numerous, flesh-colored, racemosely 
arranged along the panicle-branches, somewhat fascicled at the 
