246 NOTES FROM THE BOTANIC GARDENS, SYDNEY, xviii., 



Professor Ewart described this variety in Proc. Roy. Soc. Vict, 

 xix., 37 (1906) from specimens collected between the Finke River 

 and Charlotte Waters, Central Australia. We can now add a 

 second locality, which shows the great extent of its range. The 

 Paroo River specimens agree well with Prof. Ewart's description, 

 except that the leaves are still smaller, not exceeding 2 cm. in all 

 our specimens, while the axis of inflorescence sometimes exceeds 

 5 cm. 



MYRTACEJE. 



Kunzea parvifolia Schau., var. alba, n.var. 



Rockley (J. L. Boorman; November, 1906) ; near Braidwood (R. 

 H. Cambage; November, 1908). 



The colour of the flowers is normally lilac-purple in K. parvi- 

 folia, but we have two white-flowering specimens in the Herbarium, 

 and we find that the white forms are also always glabrous or nearly 

 so. The glabrous and white form from Braidwood is a heath-like 

 shrub with smaller flowers and leaves, and seemed to us, at first, a 

 well-marked species, but the specimens from Rockley are, in habit 

 and appearance, exactly like the typical K. parvifolia, and cannot 

 be separated from it specifically. 



Kunzea capitata Reichb. — We may mention here that Kunzea 

 capitata Reichb., also seems to have a white-flowered form. 



Specimens of a white Kunzea from Ulladulla and Milton, col- 

 lected by Mr. R. H. Cambage, seem to be a form of that species, 

 but the material is at present too imperfect to decide whether it is a 

 distinct species or a variety. 



Kunzea Cambagei, n.sp. 



On the plateau east of Mt. Werong, 3,700 feet high (R. H. Cam- 

 bage; October, 1909); Big Plain, near Mt. Werong, 3,800 feet 

 high (Richard Hind Cambage; December, 1911). 



Frutex parvus, J-l m. altus. Folia alterna, angusto-obovata, 

 4-5 mm. longa, brevissime petiolata, margine lanato. Folia matura 

 laevia nitentiaque. Flores 6-8, sericei ; in parvis capitibus termina- 

 libus in duabus angustis bracteolis et una lata bractea. Calyx 3-4 



