BY J. H. MAIDEN. 585 



A White Gum, also from Mcarulan (J.H.M.), with plum- 

 coloured bark with blotches. Multiflowered. Between vars. 

 7uaculosa and acervnla. 



A White Gum, Strathdownie, Rosewood, in the Murray Range, 

 50 miles from Wagga, on the way to Tumberumba (D. McEacharn) 

 has long leaves and approaches var. maculosa. 



Frederica Falls, Lawson (R. T. Baker). Fruits nearly hemi- 

 spherical and some of the sucker-leaves rather narrow. One of 

 the stages between var. acervula and var. maculosa. 



Blackheath and Mt. Victoria (J.H.M.). " Cabbage or White 

 Gum," Mt. Wilson (Jesse Gregson and J.H.M.), Bark reddish 

 or brownish. I cannot distinguish these from the Marulan 

 specimens referred to above. 



I have a White Gum from Capertee, and other places, with the 

 buds more glaucous and the fruits more hemispherical than usual; 

 in this respect tending towards var. ruhida. 



In some specimens from Capertee, the buds, fruits, cfec, are 

 glaucous, as are the Marulan specimens ; the suckers are broad, 

 like Gunnii. Some of the fruits are as hemispherical as those of 

 var. mihida ever are ; others are distinctly var. maculosa. 



Wallerawang and Rydal (J.H.M.). "Cabbage Gum" and 

 "White Gum," Sunny Corner to Tarana (A. Murphy); multi- 

 flowered ; small fruits precisely'' matching the Marulan specimens. 

 One of the forms showing the impossibility of separating var. 

 maculosa from var. acervala. Orange and Ophir (R. H. Cam- 

 bage). Ilford " Spotted Gum " (Mr. Baker's E. lactna). Bathurst 

 and Burraga (R. H Cambage). Oberon Road, O'Connell (Mr. 

 Baker's E. lact^a) 



Supplement. 



The forms of E. Gunnii from the northern part of New South 

 Wales, far from the home of the type, are puzzling, because they 

 do not readily range themselves under described forms. I give 

 a few notes in regard to some specimens, but (with the exception 

 of the first) I do not look upon these determinations as final. 

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