BY PROFESSOR RALPH TATE AND JOHN BRAZIER, C.M.Z.S. 569 



Doubtful and extra limital species of Uhio. 



ambiguus, Philippi ; Reeve. Vide australis. 



Ciimingi, Dunker. Vide cucumoides. 



Moretonicus. Smith, Voy. "Erebus and Terror," t. 4, f. 2, 1874. 



Vide cucumoides. 

 fulmineus, Philippi, Conchylien, III., pt. 2, 1847, p. 46, t. 3, 



f. 5, 6. Not certainly Australian. 

 superbus, Lea (Hyridella), Obs. IV., p. 39, t. 22, f. 11; Eeeve, 



Icon., t. 59, f. 295, 1868. Doubtfully Australian. 

 Aucldandicus Gray. Very doubtfully Australian. 



Genus Anodon. 



Spurious species. 



Angasi, Sowerby, in Eeeve's Conch., t. 32, f. 127, 1870= Unto 



Angasi. 

 Stuartii, Sowerby, id., t. 34, f. 136, 187 0=Alasmodon Stuartii. 



TnE Plants of New South Wales — No. I. 



By the Eev. Dr. Woolls, D.D., F.L.S., &c. 



The publication of the Flora Australiensis through the joint 

 labours of Mr. G. Bentham, C.M.G., F.R.S., and Baron F. von 

 Mueller, K.C.M.G., has formed, as it were, an era in the Botany 

 of New South Wales. Though the subject is by no means 

 exhausted, that great work will be regarded as the basis of all 

 future treatises on the Flora of Australia ; and as the grand 

 outline is being gradually filled up with descriptions of new 

 plants from different parts of the Continent, it will be seen that 

 the general arrangement of the volumes, as well as the classifi- 

 cation of orders, genera, and species, reflects the greatest credit 

 on the distinguished authors. Much, however, remains to be 

 done. Since the appearance of the first volume in 1863 some 

 IK 



