Euryops.| COMPOSIT (Harv.) 413 
Has. Sandyground, betw. Langevalley and Valley, Zey.! Dr. Pappe! 
(Herb. Cap., D., Sd.) pend og Volley, Sore! Gite ype 
Stem 1-2 ft. high, slender, sparingly branched, leafy. Leaves 1-14 inch long, 
filiform. Pedunc. 4-5 inches long. Like £. longipes but with larger fl.-heads, more 
numerous and longer rays, and dissimilar inv. scales. DC’s var. 8. of longifolius, 
belongs to this, by the chars. of iny., ray and achenes. It is more robust than 
£. punctatus, with longer and thicker, and less divided leaves and smaller fl.-heads. 
Oss. In Herb. D. and Hk. are specimens from Dr. Sutherland, gathered near 
Natal, of a Zuryops closely allied to this species, but with a dwarfer habit and 
broader leaves. It may be distinct, but the specimens are insufficient, not having 
mature flowers. 
14. E. longipes (DC.! 1. c. 445); glabrous, stems short, flexuous, 
branching, the axils of the upper leaves woolly-bearded ; leaves filiform, 
about uncial, some quite entire, some trifid to the middle, the lobes 
entire, subacute; pedunc. axillary and terminal, very long, 5-12 times 
longer than the leaves; inv. scales 7-10, ovato-lanceolate, not ribbed 
or margined ; recept. conical ; ligules 7-10; achenes (fide DC.) glabres- 
cent; ovaries puberulous. 
Var, 8. integrifolius; all the leaves entire. 
Has. Gnadendahl, Burchell. GauritzR., H.g.Z.! Gamke R., Zey./ 830. Caledon, 
Dr. Pappe. (Herb. D., Hk., Sd.) 
A rather slender, branching shrub, 6-10 inches high. Leaves 1-14 inch long, 
more uently entire than trifid (at least var. 8. seems the commonest form). 
Pedunc. 6-12 inches long or more. 
15. E. punctatus (DC.! 1. c. 445); glabrous; stems flexuous, branch- 
ing, closely leafy ; leaves slender, short, impress-dotted, some simple, 
some trifid to the middle, some pinnati-partite, 5-7-lobed, the lobes 
filiform, acute; pedunc. slender, terminal, 8-10 times as long as the 
leaves ; inv. scales 12-13, lanceolate, acuminate, ribbed; rays as many, 
longer than the disc ; achenes pubescent (DC.). Also (fide sp. in Hb. 
Sond.) Osteospermum tenuilobum, DC. ! 1. c. 467. 
Has. Gauritz R., Ecklon! (Herb. Sd.) 
A very slender shrublet, not much branched, 6-12 inches high. Leaves 3-} inch 
long, very slender, rarely undivided, almost all either trifid, or alternately 4—5~7-fid, 
all taper-pointed. The impressed dots are not conspicuous on the specimens I have 
seen. Pedunc. 4-5 inches long. Heads small, the iny. 4 lines across.—A much 
smaller and more slender plant than £. diversifolius, to which it comes nearest ; 
from ZL. longipus it is known by its more slender, shorter, and more divided leaves, 
and narrower and more numerous inv, scales. 
16. E. subcarnosus (DC.! 1. c. 445); glabrous; leaves crowded at the 
ends of the branches, linear-semiterete, fleshy, acute, some trifid, others 
(or all) undivided; peduncles filiform, as long or twice as long as the 
leaves ; inv. scales 5-6, broadly ovate, subacute, connate at base only ; 
achenes ? 
ecu On the Carroo; also Zwarteberg and Zwart Ruggens, Drege! (Herb. D., 
ie scrub, with flexuous branches and twigs, all naked and cicatrised 
at base, with tufted leaves at the extremity. Leaves 4-1 inch long. Pedune. 1-1} 
inch, thread-like. Heads like those of Z. multifidus. 
17. E. linearis (Harv. Thes. Cap. t. 153); glabrous; leaves linear, 
elongate, flat, acute, faintly 1-nerved, quite entire; pedune. axillary, 
