fiY A. A. HAMtLTON. 405 



this [Gumi\s 858] except in the larger tube of the corolla; and 

 Allan Cdnningham sends the same plant from Port Jackson 

 under the name of E. ruscifolia Br." Examples of both of 

 Gunn's specimens are now in the National Herbarium, Sydney, 

 and neither of them can be placed under E. reclinata A. Cunu., 

 both being well marked forms of E. impressa Labill., the Tas- 

 raanian species to which Gunn proposed to refer them. This 

 confirms the decision of Bentham, given above, that the affinity 

 of E. rnscifolia R.Br., is with E. impressa Labill.; and E. rusci- 

 folia Sieb., together with the specimen sent by Allan Cunning- 

 ham to Hooker labelled E. ruscifolia Br., (from the Blue Mts.) 

 are both referable to E. reclinata A. Cunn. 



Lysineraa pungens R.Br., Lawson. 



jRupicola sprengelioides Maiden & Betche, King's Tableland 

 (These Proceedings, 1898, p.775). 



Sprengelia ponceletioides Sond. ^{Fonceletia nwnticola A. Cunn.), 

 [In Barron Field's New South Wales, p. 341, Allan Cunningham 

 records Poncletia sprengelioides R.Br., as a rare, sufi'ruticose, 

 dense-habited plant adhering to rocks perpetually damp, margins 

 of the Cascade, King's Tableland. In the Fl. Austr., iv,, 248, 

 P. sprengelioides Ji. Br., is recorded in marshes near Sydney, Coll. 

 R. Brown, Sieber, and others, but is not mentioned as found on 

 the Blue Mountains. De Candolle, Prod, vii , 767, also records 

 P. sprengelioides R. Br., from Sydney, Coll. A. Cunningham. 

 Sprengelia ponceletioides Sond.,(P. monticola A. Cunn.) is recorded 

 in the Fl. Austr., iv., 248, on rocks perpetually wet, near Camp- 

 bell's Cataract, Blue Mts., Coll. A. Cunn.; and F. monticola (A. 

 Cunn., in litt.) is given in DC, Prod, vii., 768, from the Blue 

 Mts., Coll. A. Cunn. It will be seen that Allan Cunningham 

 has perpetrated a (presumably) clerical error in his paper, in- 

 corporated in Barron Field's New South Wales, by recording R. 

 Brown's Ponceletia sprengelioides from the Blue Mountains, 

 instead of his own P. montico/a.], Lawson, Wentworth Falls, 

 Leura (Leura Falls, on the face of the cliffs): ^S'. incamata Sm.,(2), 

 Leura, Clarence, in swamps. 



DracophyUum s(>cnndnm^\.\^i\,{2)^ Springwood to west of Esk- 

 bank, in crevices of moist rocks. 



