PLANTS OF VAN DIEMAN’S LAND, 247 
a foot and a half tall, much branched below. Pods 2 inches 
long, including the style. Flowers rather small, white. 
2. C. tenuifolia, n. sp.; glabra simplex, foliis omnibus 
pinnatis pinnis. linearibus simplicibus remotis, siliquis linea- 
ribus stylo longo acuminatis. 
Mr. Lawrence, (n. 231.) Marshes at Formosa.— The only 
species that I know, with which this can be confounded, is 
C. tenuirostris of Hook. and Arn. in the Bot. of Beechey's 
Voyage, and it is not unlikely but they may prove identical. 
In C. tenuirostris, however, the leaflets are occasionally again 
divided: in both, the flowers are large and white. I pos- 
sess, from N. S. Wales, gathered near Bathurst and also near 
the Macquarrie River, a species with similar rostrate pods, 
but the leaves are nearly all radical and the leaflets orbicular 
or cordate. 
VIOLARIEJXE. DC. 
l. Viola betonicifolia. Sm. in Rees’ Cycl. 
Mr. Lawrence, (1831.) Mr. Gunn, (n. 84, 1832.) 
2. V. hederacea. Labill. Fl. Nov. Holl. v. i. p. 66, t. 91. 
Mr. Lawrence, (1831.) Mr. Gunn, (n. 95, 1832.) 
DROSERACEX. DC. 
1. Drosera Arcturi, n. sp. ; foliis radicalibus lineari-spathu- 
latis scapo unifloro brevioribus, calyce glaberrimo petalis 
vix breviori. 
Summit of Mount Arthur. Mr. Gunn, (n. 139.)—This 
very fine species is at once distinguished by the shape of its 
leaves together with the solitary flower, which is as large as 
that of D. binata. 
2. D. peltata. Sm. in Rees’ Cycl. Labill. Nov. Holl. v. i. 
t. 196, f. 2. 
Mr. Gunn, (n. 350.) 
3. D. binata. Labill. Nov. Holl, v. i. t. 105. 
r. Lawrence, (n. 144, 1831.) 
