188 ON HITHERTO UNRECORDED AUSTRALIAN PLANTS. 



seceding pellicle beset with copious minute hairlets ; putamen 

 thick, hard, broadly furrowed. 



This species approaches E. Goodtoinii as regards flowers, but 

 the vestiture is not conspicuously glandular, the leaves are in 

 form and length very diflferent, while the pedicels ai'e much 

 .shorter than the calyx. The remarkable indentation of the 

 leaves is not known in any other species. 



Halgania Gustafseni, n.sp. 



Vestiture consisting of copious soft comparatively long hairlets ; 

 leaves flat, mostly elliptic-lanceolar, equally green on both sides, 

 irregularly and minutely denticulated towards the upper end, 

 their lateral venules only slightly spreading ; cymes usually 

 many-flowered, terminal and from the upper leaf-axils ; flowers 

 relatively large ; calyx about as long as the corolla, its segments 

 semilanceolate-linear ; lobes of the corolla rather conspicuously 

 narrowed at the upper portion ; anthers pale-yellow, beset with 

 minute asperities and very small hairlets, the appendages shorter 

 than the cells ; style glabrous. 



Xear Mount Hale. 



Leaves hardly I'igid, to 2 inches long, often |--inch broad, at 

 least the upper sessile. Corolla nearly glabrous, spreading to 

 about |-inch diameter. Ripe fruit not obtained. This plant 

 differs already from II. solanacea in still more conspicuous 

 indument, in much larger, more denticulated and very venulated 

 leaves, in flowers of greater size and copiousness, in the upwards 

 much narrowed calyx-lobes and in proportionate shortness of the 

 anther-appendages. The species furthermore is distinguished 

 from U. Bebrana by not conspicuously glandular vestiture, by 

 leaves more wrinkled on the surface and by more elongated 

 calyx-lobes. H. integerrima in its typical state has been found 

 by Mr. Edwin Merrall near Mt. Moore ; its leaves are occa- 

 sionally denticulated towai'ds the summit, its flowers are not 

 seldom solitary ; Drummond's plant n. 96 diff'ers, at all events 

 as a variety, in its vestiture. H. corymhosa extends to the 

 Greenough River (Miss Duncan). 



