390 Transactions. 



Family Droseraceae. 



J. F. A. and J. B. A. record, but probably in error, {-)Brosem 

 spathulata and {-)D. hinata. 



Family Crassulaceae. 

 Crassula Sieberiana Schultz. [L. C] 



An annnal, abundant in dry, hard ground and on rocks in spring 

 and summer. 



*Crassula moschata DC. [J. B. A.] 



Crown Island Run, on the coast. 



J. B. A. records also {^)Tillaea Sinclairii. 



Family Saxifragaceae. 



Carpodetus serratus Forst. [J. F. A. ; J. B. A. ; L. C] 

 A common forest tree. 



J. B. A. lists also {-)Quintinia serrata, a ([uite unlikeh- species. 



Family Pittosporaceae. 



Pittosjwrum tenuifolium Banks & Sol. [R. ; J. F. A. ; J. B. A. ; L. C] 



Abundant in forest, and here erroneously called " matipo." The 

 relative pro})ortions of the leaves vary considerably in breadth and length 

 in different specimens. 



J. B. A. and J. F. A. record also P. Colensoi, but a specimen so 

 named by J. B. A. in tlie Canterbury Museum is a common form of 

 P. tenuifolium. 



Pittosporum cugenioidcs A. Cunn. [J. F. A. ; J. B. A. ; L. C] 

 Common in the forest. 



*°{^)PiUospon<m ohcordatum Raoul. [R. ; J. B. A.] 



Akaroa : R. (type-locality). Does not appear to have been found 

 since the days of Raoul at Akaroa, though it appears in J. B. A.'s list 

 (see Cheeseman, Trans., vol. 39, p. 436). 



Family Rosaceae. 



Rubus australis Forst. f. var. glaber Hook. f. [J. F. A. ; J. B. A. ; L. C] 

 Abundant in the forest. 



Biibics cissoides A. Cunn. [J. B. A.] 

 In the forests ; abundant. 



Var. pauperatus Kirk, though sometimes found in the forest, is more 

 often found in the open, chiefly on the sites of old forests. [J. B. A. ; 

 L. C] 



Riibus schmidelioides A. Cunn. [J. B. A.] var. co'oratus Kirk [L. C] 



Common on the margin of the forests, and in rocky ground above 

 the forests. 



Rubus subpauperatus Cockayne. [L. C] 



Common near the outskirts of the forest. 



Potentilla anserina Linn. var. anserinoides Raoul. [R. ; J. F. A. : J. B. A. 

 L. C] 

 In swampy ground occasionally. (Akaroa is the type-locality.) 



