BY R. T. BAKER. 443 



LAURINEiE. 



CiNNAMOMUM Oliveri, Bail. — Bexhill, Alstonville, and Tin- 

 tenbar, in the Richmond River District; most plentiful at Bex- 

 hill, and at Murwillumbah and Tumbulgum on the Tweed, also 

 at Mullumbimby on the Brunswick; more plentiful about Mullum- 

 bimby and Murwillumbah than anywhere else (W. Bauerlen). 



PROTEACEa;. 



Grevillea floribunda, R.Br. — Gerogery (J. Mann). This is 

 its most southerly recorded locality. 



Grevillea Hilliana, F.v.M. — Mr. Bauerlen I'eports that this 

 tree grows to a great height at North Tumbulgum, some trees 

 measuring 100 feet in height and 2 feet in diameter. 



Grevillea junipkrina, R.Br. — This species extends as far 

 south as Monga, Clyde Road, Braidwood ; and both red and 

 yellow flowers are found on the same plant at Mongarlowe (Braid- 

 wood) where the species is plentiful on the banks of the Little 

 River (W. Bauerlen). 



Banksia serrata, L. — Occurs as far west as Cadia, Orange 



(W. Wallace). 



EUPHORBIACE.a;. 



*Exc^cARiA Dallachyana, Baill. — H. E. Baillon regarded 

 this plant as a variety of E. Ayallocha, Linn., but Bentham (B.Fl. 

 Vol. vi. p. 1.53) although placing it as a species, also expresses a 

 doubt whether it is not rather a variety of that species. 



From the quantity of material collected at Tumbulgum and 

 Ballina by AV. Bauerlen of both plants respectively, the two 

 appear to be quite distinct. Bentham states (loc. cit.) that 

 the flowers, both male and female, are apparently the same as in 

 E. Ayallocha. This does not hold with the specimens from Tum- 

 bulgum, for the male spikes of E. Dallachyana, Baill., are much 

 shorter as well as more slender, being rarely over 9 lines long, 

 whilst those of E. Agallocha are sometimes as much as '5 inch 

 long. The fruits, however, are nearly 5 lines in diameter. 



* Species marked with an asterisk have not previously been recorded 

 from New South Wales. 



