Species novae in Horto Botanico Sydneyano (D. 55 
Stanthorpe are identical with specimens in the Melbourne Herbarium 
from Maryland, between New South Wales and Queensland, collected 
by E. Hickey (no date) and labelled by Mueller ,,B. ledifolia, var. repanda*. 
Queensland, Stanthorpe, on the borders of New South Wales 
(J. L. Borrman; July 1904). 
2. Cryptandra amara Sm. var. floribunda Maiden et Betche, 1. c., 
p. 736. . : 
A very handsome, erect shrub, with slightly tomentose young 
branches, about 2 to 3 feet high. Leaves linear, with closely revolute 
margins concealing the underside, glabrous, nearly 2 lines long. Flowers 
very numerous, almost sessile in leafy clusters, forming  spike-like 
racemes on the ends of the branches, sometimes exceeding !/, inch 
in length. 
New South Wales: Howell, New England; also Stanthorpe Queens- 
land, on the border of New South Wales (both, J. L. Boorman; 
July, 1904). 
This new variety seems to stand almost intermediate between 
C. amara and C, lanosiflora; it has the flowers of the former, but the 
leaves of the latter. It is the handsomest of all the Cryptandras we 
know, and is distinguished from the normal form by the comparatively 
long Erica-like leaves. 
3. Pomaderris phylicifolia Lodd. var. ericoides Maiden et Betche, |. c., 
p. 187. 
There are two very distinct forms of P. phylicifolia common in moun- 
tainous districts of this State. One has narrow leaves with the margins 
so much recurved that the underside is quite concealed; the other form 
has broader leaves, with less recurved margins, leaving the white under- 
side exposed. The latter form is Loddiges type, as figured in his 
„Botanical Cabinet’ (t. 120); the former is Hooker's P. ericifolia, united by 
both Bentham and Mueller with P. phylicifolia. Though no sharp line 
can be drawn between the two forms, their extremes look very distinct; 
and as Bentham omitted to give a name to the narrow-leaved form, we 
propose now to name it var. ericoides. 
New South Wales: Tantawanglo Mountain (J. H. Maiden; De- 
cember, 1896); Barber’s Creek (H. J. Rumsey; Oktober, 1898); Mongar- 
lowe, near Braidwood (W. Bäuerlen; November, 1898); Mt. Kosciusko 
(J. H. Maiden and W. Forsyth; January, 1899); Jenolan Caves (W. F. 
Blakely; November 1899); Mt. Wilson (J. Gregson; Oktober, 1900). 
4. Dodonaea truncatiales F. v. Müller var. heterophylla Maiden et Betche, 
L e. p 198. 
Leaves from linear to linear-lanceolate, 2 to 3 inches long, entire 
or irregularly pinnate with 1 to 7 leaflets. In none of the specimes we 
have seen are the leaves regularly and constantly pinnate, as in Benthams 
Series v. Pinnatae. The leaves are generally simple, but ocasionally 
more or less completely pinnate; the rhachis in the pinnate leaves is 
