11800. Chaselia obecurinervia Elm. ne sp. Lax 
shrub in dry forests of fertile soil along the Sibulan river 
and the Baraceten ereek from 1250 foo2500 feet: stem 9 feet 
high, laxly branched; leeves horizontal or descending, 
thinly coriaceous, much paler green beneath, the midvein 
beneath and towards the base reddish; twigs green; infrutes- 
eence erect, the stelke red; fruits globose, green, with 
purplish red stigmas; “Cayut-dimokod." Todaya, July, 1909. 
11204. Sterenlia humilis Blm. ne ap. Strict and 
suffruteseence, unbranched, ebout 3 feet high, in rich 
moist alluvial soil of deep dense woods slong the Sibulan 
river at 2600 feet; Todaye, July, 1909. 
11205. Nephelium xerospermoides Radlk. ne sp. Smell 
erect tree on fertile slopes densely wooded along the Sibulan 
river et 1260 feet; stem 30 feet high, 8 inehee thick: 
branches srising from the middle, ascending, the ultimate 
one spreading and forming more or less bushes; wood moderate- 
ly herd, reddish toward the center, odorlees and tasteless; 
bark smooth, grayish white mottled; coriaceous leaves 
horizontal or aseending, shellowly eonéuplicate on the 
upper deep green and lucid surfaee, glaucescent beneath, 
midvein yellowish, fruits hanging from thickened brown — 
stalke, ellipsoid or shortly obovoid-ellipsoia, 1 1/2 
inches long, 1 ineh serose above the middle, quite hard, 
apple-red on the exposed sides, “Loo-~on"; fruits edible. 
Todays, July, 1909. 
11206.  Caneriam sibulenense Slim. n. ep. Strict tree 
60 feet high with an 6 inch thiek stem on wooded revines of 
etreame of fertile scil near the Sibulan river at 1500 feet: 
branches mainly toward the top, forming e rather dense 
erown; wood odorless end testelese, reddish brown towerd 
the center, moderately hard, without odor or taste; o1d 
bark cheeked in omell plates, thet on the brenehes smooth 
and yellowish gray; twige with suberect tips, brownish; 
petioles ascendingly recurved, the lower portion of the 
rechis brownish, green towards the apex, at the base pro- 
vided with large laciniate rather rigid stipular bracts; 
leaflete nearly flet, mostly deseending, only the tips 
recurved, sublucid on both sides; rigidly coriaceous or 
rather chertaceous: infratescence erect, the stout etealke 
tO 10:or more inches long, brownish, speringly brenched; 
ealyx thiek, green end covered with the same brown covering 
ag the stalks petioles end stipules; nut 1 ineh long, 
oblong in outline, subterete, less then 1/2 ineh across, 
yellowish green end more or less glaucously covered; nuts 
erect, mostly at the ende of the infrutescent stelke, rether 
few; “Oget-" "Bieuen” fruite edibbe, and gum or resin used 
for light. Todeysa, July, 1909. 
11208. Parinarium griffithianum Benth. free 60 
feet high or higher, in forests of a stream neer the Sibulen 
river at 1600 feet; stem 2 1/2 feet thick, not streight, 
round; wood hard, odorless and tasteless, sepwood whitish 
the central portion reddish, bark thin or comparatively 
so, reddish beneath the yellowish grey epidermie, rigid 
end herd, emooth or sesling in thin plates; limbes grayz, 
536 
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