BY E. P. RAMSAY, F.L.S., ETC. 



765 



species. I regret we have no specimen of Gould's Hapalotis 

 murinus to compare with it. 



The wood cuts show in — 



Fig. 1 . The pinna of the Ear. 

 ,, 2. The under surface of the hand. 



„ 3. The under surface of the foot. 

 (Type in the Macleay Museum.) 



Fig. 1. Fig. 2. 



Fig. 3. 



Plants of New South Wales — No. V. 

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

 We are now to review the Monochlamydece, including Sub-class 

 III. and also theGymnospermcs, Sub-class IV., which extend from 

 Yol. V., p. 142, to Vol. VI., p. 255 of the Flora Australie)isis, thus 

 concluding the grand division of monocotyledonous plants. The 

 species are not so numerous as those of the llonopetala, but the 

 sub-classes are remarkable as containing plants with only one, 

 or, in the case of the Gynmospermce, without any floral envelope, 

 amongst the former of which many of the Protectees are peculiarly 

 Australian. According to the species yet recorded for the three 

 colonies, the following is the result, though there can be but 



