384 
MERRILL AND MERRITT. 
branches in pairs, the smaller one of each pair one-third to one-half 
shorter than the- other; nerves about 6 on each side of the midrib, 
ascending, rather distinct- on the lower surface; petioles 0.5 to 2.5 cm. 
long. Flowers axillary, solitary, in pairs, or in fascicles of 3 or 4, 
white to pale-purplish, the pedicels 1 to 2.5 cm long, in. anthesis 
somewhat thickened upward, spreading or reflexed, rarely erect or 
ascending, glabrous. Calyx glabrous or slightly and obscurely puberulent, 
somewhat funnel-shaped, becoming broadly cup-shaped in anthesis, the 
rim subentire, the 10 ridges extending as narrow, stout, blunt teeth 1 
to 2 mm in length, the calyx in bud prominently ridged, in anthesis the 
ridges becoming more obscure, the calyx splitting down one side. 
Corolla-tube about 4 mm long, the lobes 5, oblong-ovate or ovate, acute, 
7 to 9 mm long. Anthers 5, oblong, about 5 mm long. Style about 8 
mm long. Fruit globose, fleshy, 1 cm in diameter (immature). 
In the mossy forest above an altitude of 2,300 m, C. M. Z. 16201, 16203, Mc- 
Gregor 8814, Merrill 6588. From similar habitats, Bur. Sci. 4401, 3418 Mearns, 
Pauai, Benguet, and Merrill 4548 (type), from Mount Data, District of Lepanto, 
Luzon. 
This species is manifestly allied to Solatium hiflorum Lour., but is apparently 
sufficiently distinct from that and all hitherto described allied forms. Its distin- 
guishing features are in being nearly glabrous, with comparatively large flowers, 
and its calyx splitting down one side. 
LYCOPERSICUM Tourn. 
1. L. esculentum Mill. Gard. Diet. ed. 8 (1768) no. 2. 
Cultivated by the Igorots, pine region, altitude about 1,800 m, G. M. Z. 16335. 
Cultivated and subspontaneous throughout the Philippines, introduced from 
tropical America; cultivated everywhere in temperate and tropical regions. 
NICOTIANA Linn. 
1. N. tabacum Linn. Sp. PI. (1753) 180. 
Cultivated by the Igorots, altitude about 1,200 m, C. M. Z. 16165. 
Extensively cultivated in the Philippines, a native of tropical America, and 
now cultivated in most temperate and tropical countries. 
SCROPHULARIACEiE. 
LINDENBERGIA Lehm. 
1. L. philippensis (Cham.) Bentli. in DC. Prodr. 10 (1846) 377. 
In stream depressions, pine region, below an altitude of 1,500 m, C. M. Z. 16071. 
Common and widely distributed in the Philippines at low and medium alti- 
tudes; Chittagong to Tenasserim, Siam, and China. 
HEMIPHRAGMA Wall. 
1. H. heterophyllum Wall. Cat. (1831) no. 3895; Benth. in DC. Prodr. 10 
(1846) 429. 
Mossy forest above an altitude of 2,300 m, C. M. Z. 16041- 
Known in the Philippines only from high altitudes in the Benguet-Lepanto 
region; temperate Himalaya, Ivhasia Mountains, southern China, and Formosa. 
