244 NOTES FROM THK BOTANIC GARDENS, SYDNEY, xviii., 



hairs, and is further distinguished from it by the long slender 

 peduncles; the staminodia are always few, and closely pressed to 

 the edges of the stamens, and not dispersed round the carpels, as 

 frequently in H. hypericoides. 



In December, 1910, we received from Mr. Koch, from the same 

 locality, almost glabrous specimens of the same species, with the 

 following note : — "This is a form which grows in very moist situa- 

 tions, and is densely branched and prostrate. It is very commonly 

 met with in swamps after the water has gone back a bit." These 

 specimens are identical with the hirsute form in every respect, 

 except that the hairs are so few that they appear glabrous at first 

 sight. 



RUTACEiE. 



Boronia Deanei, Maiden & Betche. 



Swampy flats above Fitzroy Falls, near Moss Vale (Miss Agnes 

 Brewster; September, 1911). 



The type of this species was collected, in 1906, by Mr. Henry 

 Deane, on the road from Clarence Siding to Wolgan, in the Blue 

 Mountains, at an altitude of about 3,400 feet (These Proceedings, 

 xxxi., 731, 1906). 



The Fitzroy Falls specimens have rather longer and more slender 

 leaves, the stigma is thicker, and there are some slight differences 

 in the stamens and the shape of the petals ; but the distinctions are 

 unessential, and are perhaps caused by the difference in altitude 

 of the two localities. These are the only localities recorded so far. 



SAPINDACEJE. 



Nephelium Forsythii Maiden & Betche. 



Top of Mt. Duri, near Currabubula, 3,150 feet high (R. H. Cam- 

 bage; August, 1912). 



A new locality for a rare plant. The tree was described by us 

 in these Proceedings (xxvi., 81, 1901) from specimens collected 

 by the late Mr. W. Forsyth, in the Tia Canyon, in the Walcha dis- 

 trict. The new locality (Peel Range) brings the range of the 

 species considerably to the west, since the former locality is east of 

 the Moonbi Range. 



