INDEX. 



Exhibits :— 



infested with Rust ; Erechfhites 

 from Twofold Bay ; Dy.sphania 

 lifforaUs, poisonous to Stock; Cen- 

 taurj" from England and Austra- 

 lia, 290 — Geranium and Acacia at- 

 tacked by Rust; Couch Grass with 

 abnormal inflorescences, 416 — (xer- 

 anium Rust; abnormal Orange, 420 

 — Red Clover Rust in all stages ; 

 fresh flowering and herlmrium spe- 

 cimens of Callixttmoti spp. ; flowers 

 of HeJichi-ysvm varying in colour, 

 625, 626 — Seven species or vars. of 

 Hardenhti-gia, T22. 



Cleland, J. B., rootlets of a Eucalypt 

 dependent from the roof of a 

 tunnel, 116. 



David, T. W. E. , Carboniferous plant 

 (Ulodendron) from Welshman's 

 Creek, N.S.W., xx. 



Dixon, J. R. L., sections of decalci- 

 fied lower jaw-bone of a dog, pre- 

 pared by the pyridin-silver-nitrate 

 method, 119. 



Ferguson, E. W., foreign biting- 

 flies, 116. 



Fletcher, J. J., abncnnial racemes of 

 Poke-weed, 421 — Viscid fruits of 

 Pi.soiiia, which catch Blue Wrens, 

 629. 



and Musson, C T. , 



lantern-illustrations of modifica- 

 tion of plant-growth due t(J para- 

 sites, XX. — Plants collected near 

 the boundary between the Counties 

 of Cumberland and Cook, 489. 



Froggatt, W. W., Golden Stagbeetles 

 from Uralla; leaves of Waratah 

 attacked Iwa leaf -mining larva*210 

 — Longicorn-beetle, whose larva? 

 girdle Eucalypt branchlets, 417 — 

 Cocoons of the Blue Sawfly; Cen- 

 tipede from Brewarrina, N.S.W. ; 

 Opunfia infested with Cocfii.'<, 628 

 — Insects blown out to sea, and 

 waslied up on Womberal beach; 

 Life-history of a Longicorn-beetle, 

 and its parasites; Cordyceps on a 

 beetle, 720. 



Hamilton, A. A. , teiutological and 

 xerophytic plants, examples of 

 leaf-variation, 117, 208, 288, 414, 

 417, 486, 627, 720 — Dimorphic 

 foliage of Callitris, 118 — Plants 



Exhibits :— 



from Woronora River, 627 — Re- 

 marks on the distribution oi Acacia 

 trinerrata and Perxoonia ohlongata, 

 628. 



Hedley, C. , Japanese conchological 

 illustrations, 207. 



Hull, A. F. B., Wilson's Storni- 

 Petrel caught at sea; section of 

 stem of CaJficoma bored by a 

 beetle, 116. 



Hynes, Miss S., double flowers of 

 Wahleiihertjia (p'aci/i'<, and paint- 

 ing, 629. 



Maiden, J. H., tubers of MiraJ)ilis 

 longijlora ; flowering-specimen of 

 EncaJyptns torquata, 117 — Hybrid 

 Boronia, 419. 



Musson, C. T., -see Fletcher, J. J. 

 [supra). 



North, A. J., eggs of sea-birds, collect- 

 ed bv the Australasian Antarctic 

 Expedition, 1911-14, 291— Type- 

 sets of Australian birds' eggs, and 

 Cuckoo type-sets, 420, 421 — Skin 

 of Extinct Phillip Island Parrot, 

 and a New Zealand Parrot; re- 

 mai'ks on probable extinction of 

 the Chestnut-shouldered Grass- 

 Parakeet, 488. 



Sulman, Miss F,, leaves of Waratah 

 attacked by a leaf-mining larva, 

 210. 



Tillyard, R. J., larva* of two rare 

 Zygopterid Dragonflies, 416 — Neu- 

 ropterous larva(/^.s-yc/<o/y.-/.ssp. ),62o. 



Turner, F., Grasses, 115 — Scchinm 

 eduJe with variegated leaves, 209 

 — Remarks on Grasses, 288 — West 

 Australian plants, 719. 



Waterhouse, G. A., collection of 

 butterflies from Gallipoli, 722. 



Watts, Rev. W. W., an abnormal 

 form of the common Bracken 

 Tern, 210. 



Feeding-tracks of Limax, 114. 

 Fellows, Linnean Macleay : summaries 



of year's work, xii.-xiii. 

 Fellowships: announcements, 625, 719; 



Elections to, xiii.-xiv, 

 Ferguson, E. W., Revision of the 



Amycferides, Pt. iv., 685, 759 — »S'ee 



Exhibits, 216. 

 Fern, bracken, abnormal, exhibited,210. 



