L. Cockayne. — Notes on New Zealand Floristic Botany.. 187 



15. Corallospartium crassicaule (Hook, f.) J. B. Armstg. 



South Island: Eastern Botanical District — Mount Hutt, subalpine. 

 A. Wall ! 



16. Donatia novae-zelandiae Hook. f. 



South Island : Western Botanical District — Mount Tuhua, subalpine. 

 J. E. Holloway ! 



17. Dracophyllum Kirkii Berggren. 



South Island : Western Botanical District — Browning's Pass. J. E. 

 Holloway ! 



18. Drapetes villosa (Berggren) Cheesem. 



South Island : Western Botanical District — Mount Tuhua, subalpine. 

 J. E. Holloway ! 



19. Epilobium chionanthum Hausskn. 



South Island : Eastern Botanical District — Swamp on Waimakariri 

 River bed, on the Craigieburn Run. A. Wall ! 



20. Euphrasia cuneata Forst. f. 



North Island : Ruahine-Cook Botanical District — (1.) Near Plimmer- 

 ton, in a remarkable subassociation of a Typha-Phormium swamp where 

 Leptocarpus simplex is dominant: L..C. (2.) Waikanae, on Sphagnum: 

 W. H. Field. 



21. Forstera Bidwillii Hook. f. 



South Island : Western Botanical District — Mount Tuhua, subalpine. 

 J. E. Holloway ! 



22. Gaultheria perplexa T. Kirk. 



South Island: Eastern Botanical District — Near the Rakaia Gorge. 

 A. Wall ! 



23. Gentiana serotina Cockayne. 



South Island: Eastern Botanical District — Hills near "The Point," 

 Rakaia Gorge. A. Wall ! 



24. Gleichenia Cunninghamii Heward. 



South Island : Eastern Botanical District — Forest at base of Mount 

 Hutt. A. Wall ! 



The localities previously known for this fern in the Eastern Botanical 

 District are : Mount Peel ; Alford Forest ; Banks Peninsula, especially 

 near Port Levy (T. H. Potts, Out in the Open, p. 53, 1882). 



25. Isotoma fluviatilis (R. Br.) F. von Muell. 



South Island : (1.) Eastern- Botanical District — Shore of Lake Rubicon, 

 Mount Torlesse : A. Wall ! (2.) North-eastern Botanical District — Awatere 

 River basin, subalpine : C. E. Foweraker and L. C. 



This species, first recorded for New Zealand in the Manual, p. 401, is 

 now known to occur in all the botanical districts of the South Island 

 excepting the Western and Fiord Districts. 



