.carpum Hook. 
Vermischte neue Diagnosen. 381 
with a stamen and no scales, the others devoid of either.  Carpels of 
the ovary usually from 5—9. 
This species is closely allied to C. muscoides, pulvinata, and pusilla. 
From the first it is distinguished .by the smaller and broader bracts 
and the absence of scales. In C. pulvinata the bracts are a little distant 
from each other, and rather long hyaline scales are present. C. pusilla 
has both bracts obtuse or scarcely pointed and each flower with one or 
two hyaline scales. 
Victoria: Swampy ground, Little Desert, Lowan; F. M. Reader, 
November, 1900. Also found by Mr. H. B. Williamson at Hawkesdale 
in March, 1904. 
375. Brachycome ciliaris Less. var. subintegra F. M. Reader in Victorian 
Nat. XXIII (1906), p. 25. 
New variety. — Victoria. 
316. Brachycome goniocarpa Sond. and F. v. M., var. longiscapa F. M. 
Reader, l. c. | 
New variety. — Victoria. 
377. Cassinia aculeata R. Br. var. angustata F. M. Reader, l. c. 
New variety. — Victoria, 
318. Gnaphalium luteo-album L. var. minor F. M. Reader, L c. 
New variety. — Victoria. 
379. Poa caespitosa Forst. var. flexuosa F. M. Reader, |. c. 
New variety. — Victoria. 
380. Scirpus riparius L. var. nanus F. M. Reader, l. c. 
New variety. — Victoria. 
381. Stipa acrociliata F. M. Reader var. minor F. M. Reader, Low 
New variety, — Victoria. 
382. Styphelia costata F. v. M. var. amplexans F. M. Reader, c. 
New variety. — Victoria. 
383, Vittadinia australis A, Rich. var. dust F. M. Reader, |. c. 
New variety. — Victoria. 
384. Triglochin turrifera (an nov. spec.?) A. J. Ewart in Victorian 
Nat., XXIII (1906), p. 43. 
A small tufted plant, perfectly glabrous. Leaves filiform, terete or 
slightly flattened, 6 to 10 cm long. Seape, including the flowering part, 
' about as long, or somewhat shorter, than the leaves. Flowers rather 
distant in the raceme, 6 to 12 in number, shortly pedicellate, occasio- 
nally opposite. Ovary with 3 perfect cells, and without any other rudi- 
mentary sterile cells, the 3 styles quite short. Fruit nearly 3 mm long 
and about 1 mm in diameter, turret-shaped, the broad base extended into 
six deltoid points, the top shortly conical. 
Vietoria: Taylors Creek, Wimmera District; J. P. Eckert. 
This plant resembles T. mucronatum, R. Br., in stature and habit, 
but is easily distinguished by the peculiar fruit and the absence of 
any sterile loeuli. It may possibly prove to be a variety of T. centro- 
25* 
D^ WP MC MOTEL e LE Et era Nn 
doo M DI Rie Ue Weile 
