22107. Polypodium longicuspe C. Chr. n. sp. Descending tufts from 
moss covered tree trunks in humid woods; rhizome rigid, crooked and short 
rebranched, young tips clothed with dense soft hair-like scales; stipes and 
rachis shining black beneath; pinnae also rigid, somewhat paler beneath, 
the segments usually bordered by grayish white lime spots. Mt. Pinatubo, 
April to June, 1927. Polypod. 
22108. Trichomanes pallidum Blm. With other mosses forming patches 
in the lower or sheltered portions of trees, logs or cliffs of very wet or 
humid places; fronds descending or subpendent, very thin or soft, ashy gray; 
the [massed?] rhizomes filiform. Mt. Pinatubo, April to June, 1927. Fern. 
22109. [No name. ] On host number 22100: Symplocos ahernii. Mt. 
Pinatubo, April to June, 1927. Crypt. 
22111. Curculigo capitulata (Lour.). Rank tufts upon very humid ledges 
or in other very wet places of the jungles; stem 2 inches thick or thicker, 
a foot long or less; petioles erect, arranged in 3 ranks, the blade much 
recurved and convex beneath; flowers yellow, the head turned downwards, upon 
10 inches long stalk which arises from the leaf axils. Mt. Pinatubo, April 
to June, 1927. Amaryll. 
22112. Ficus benguetense Merr. Crooked tree in damp dense woods; the 
bark mottled; branches spreading; leaves likewise spreading but with re- 
curved tips, paler beneath, the young ones much lighter green; figs green, 
ascending from the leaf axils, single or in pairs. Mt. Pinatubo, April to 
June, 1927. Morac. 
22113. [No name.] A moss forming dense masses along small tree trunks 
of wet jungles near a stream bed. Mt. Pinatubo, April to June, 1927. 
Crypt. _ 
22114. Procris laevigata Blm. Suffrutescent and epiphytic in damp 
woods; stem flexible, ascendingly curved, occasionally branched; the thick 
leaves ascending; male flowers upon slender stalks, pale white, the female 
in very dense axillary green clusters. Mt. Pinatubo, April to June, 1927. Urtic. 
22115. Rubus moluccanus Linn. A rambling shrub in jungles; leaves 
mostly horizontal, yellowish beneath; flowers mainly toward the ends and 
often pendant or nearly so, the petals white. Mt. Pinatubo, April to June, 
1927. Rosac. 

