54 
71. DICHAA ochracea; foliis linearibus acutis carinatis, pedunculis foliorum 
feré longitudine, bracteá cucullata ovarii longitudine, sepalis petalisque ob- 
longis acutis, labello subrotundo rhomboideo sessili, columná pilosá, clinan- 
drio membranaceo-marginato, antherá bigibbosá. 
A small Demerara plant, with narrow leaves, and pale 
yellow-ochre-coloured flowers. It is next D. graminoides, 
which differs in having smaller flowers with very short 
peduncles, and both shorter and flatter leaves. Messrs. 
Loddiges obtained it from Demerara. 
72. GREVILLEA Thelemaniana; foliis trifido-pinnatifidis, laciniis linearibus 
subtus bisulcatis submucronatis junioribus appressé subpubescentibus, racemo 
denso. Hugel in litt. 
^ 
A beautiful New Holland shrub, with numerous racemes 
of crimson flowers, and narrow pinnatifid leaves. It has 
recently been raised at Vienna by Baron Hugel, to whom I 
am indebted for a knowledge of this and several other rare 
species now existing in his very valuable collection. It 
belongs to Brown's section of Grevillea proper. 
73. CONOSTYLIS juncea ; perigonio intus glabro, scapis indivisis capitulo 
vix longioribus, foliis teretiusculis laevibus. Hugel in litt. 
A rigid herbaceous plant, with leaves from six inches to 
a foot long, at the base of which grow heads of campa- 
nulate erect flowers. The tube of the perianth is yellowish 
green, covered with harsh hairs; the limb is divided into 
six, equal, acuminate segments, deep yellow at the base, 
whitish at the point, the stamens are six, and inserted equally 
into the throat of the perianth. It is a pretty greenhouse 
herbaceous plant, found on the south coast of New Holland 
by Baron Hugel, and raised at Vienna, where it has flowered. 
74. ACACIA cuneata. Benth. in Hugel’s enumeratio, p. 42. 
This plant, from the Swan River, has been raised at 
Vienna by Baron Hugel. It appears, from a drawing that 
has been sent me, to have glaucous wedge-shaped truncated 
phyllodia, and solitary yellow capitula, whose peduncle is 
nearly half the length of the leaf. It does not entirely agree 
with the definition given by Mr. Bentham, in the work above 
quoted, both the angles of the phyllodia being tipped with a 
spine, the midrib forking above the middle, each of its arms 
being directed towards an angle, and the peduncles being 
