SUMMAEY AND ANALYSIS* OF THE ELORA. 



205 



Position 



. in the 



Australian 



Flora. 



(135) 

 (52) 

 (121) 



(71) 



(97) 

 (3) 



(89) 



(112) 

 (31) 



(135) 



(135) 

 (135) 



(97) 



(97) 

 (112) 



(10) 

 (42) 



(149f) 

 (94) 



(125) 



+ 



(125) 



Orders. 



129. Ochnaceae . . . 



130. Picoideae 



131. Pedalineae . . . 



132. Juglandaceae . 



133. Eriocauleae . . . 



134. Vochysiaceae . 



135. Sabiaceae 



136. Primulaceae . 



137. Proteaceae . . . 



138. Platanaceae. . . 



139. Rhizocarpeae . 



140. Lennoaceae . . . 



141. Plumbagineae . 



142. Thymelaeaceae . 



143. Tamariscineae . 



144. Hamamelideae 



145. Monotropeae . 



146. Chloranthaceae 



147. Myristieaceaa . 



148. Balanophoreae 



149. Gnetaceae . . . 



150. Rhizophoreae . 



151. Cytineae 



152. Myricaceae . . . 



153. Pumariaeeae . 



154. Resedaceae . . . 



155. Frarikeniaceae . 



156. Elatinaeeae . . . 



157. Chailletiaceae . 



158. Coriarieae . . . 



159. Datiscaceae . . . 



160. GoodeiiovieaD . 



161. Santalaceae . . . 



162. Lacistemaceae. 



163. Ceratophylleae 



164. Hydrocharideae 



165. Burmanniacese 



166. Haemodoraceae 



167. Typhaceae ... 



Number 



of 

 Species. 



Number 



of 

 Genera. 



Distribution of the Orders. 



Tropics, very rare in subtropical regions. 



Tropical and subtropical, and numerous in S. Africa. 



„ „ „ chiefly Africa. 



Worth temperate zone and countries of tropical Asia and 



Central America. 

 Widely spread, most numerous in S. America. 

 Tropical and subtropical America. 



» 5 , „ chiefly north ; not in Australasia. 



Very widely spread, chiefly N. temperate and frigid. 

 Australasia, S. Africa ; few S. Ameriea ; very few tropical 



Africa and Asia, and northward to Japan. 

 Temperate and subtropical Asia, E.Europe, and N.America, 

 Generally spread, except frigid regions. 

 Southern California. 



Very widely, especially in maritime and sandy districts. 

 Widely spread, chiefly in temperate and subtropical re- 

 gions. 

 Remainder N. temperate and subtropical of Old World 



and S. Africa. 

 N. temperate and subtropical, and S. Africa. 

 N. temperate zone, southward in America to Colombia. 

 Tropical and E. Asia ; Tropical America, Polynesia, and 



N. Zealand. 

 Tropics, chiefly Asia and America. 



„ rare in Mediterranean, S. Africa, and N. Zealand. 



„ „ temperate regions, absent in Australasia. 



Tropics, chiefly maritime districts. 

 Warm regions of Asia, Africa, America, and Europe. 

 Widely spread in temperate arid tropical regions ; none in 



Australasia. 

 N. temperate and subtropical regions, and S. Africa. 

 * N. temperate and subtropical regions of Old World and S. 



Africa. 

 Widely diffused in maritime districts. 



„ „ temperate and tropical regions. 



Tropics, except Australia, one S. Africa. 

 Widely spread in temperate regions, except S. Africa and 



Australia. 

 S.E. Europe, Asia, California. 

 Australasia, and a very few littoral in tropics. 

 Widely spread in temperate and tropical regions. 

 Tropical America. 



Cosmopolitan, except frigid regions. 

 Widely, though thinly scattered in temperate and tropical 



regions. 

 Thinly spread over the tropics and E. temperate N. America. 

 Widely spread, chiefly Australia and S. Africa. 

 Generally dispersed, except frigid regions ; rare in tropics. 



The comparisons afforded by the figures, borrowed from Mueller, of the vegetation of 

 two such distant and dissimilar countries as Australia and Mexico are extremely in- 



* The one species in North Mexico and California is very doubtfully native. 



t Combined with HaJorageae by Mueller. + Treated as a tribe of the Amaryllidese by Mueller. 



2<?2 



