644 INDIGENOUS PLANTS IN THE COBAR DISTRICT, ti., 



DodonjEA BORONiiEFOLiA Don. The wings of the fruits of this 

 species are more wrinkled than those of others. It is 

 an attractive shrub in appearance. At Restdown. 

 Fruiting in September. 



D. triangularis Lindl. 



D. sp.(?). Having foliage answering to D. megazyga F.v.M. 

 At Shuttleton. 



D. attenuata Cunn. Cobar. 

 Cardiospermum Halicacabum Lerida. " Balloon-Climber " No- 

 vember-April. 



Series iii. Calyciflorae. 



LEGUMINOSiE. 



Suborder Papilionacece. 

 Eutaxia empetrifolia Schl. On the spinifex-country, 6 miles 



east of Shuttleton. September. 

 Lotus australis var. parviflorus. Kergunyah. November. 

 Psoralea cinerea Lindl. Wuttagoona. September. 



P. tenax Lindl. 

 Swainsona galegifolia R.Br. " Darling Pea." Wuttagoona. 

 September. 

 S. luteola F.v.M. At the rifle-butts, Cobar. June. 

 S. phacoides Benth. 



Suborder Ccesalpiniece. 

 Cassia Sturtii R.Br. A narrow-leaved variety is growing at 

 Shuttleton, and shows a more profuse flowering than 

 that of the typical species. 



Suborder Mimosece. 

 Acacia rig ens Cunn. Wuttagoona. 



A. calamifolia Sweet. Shuttleton. 



A. salicina (additional note). The natural habitat of this 

 species is the river-country, where it is easily distin- 

 guished by its drooping habit; but in the Cobar dis- 

 trict, it grows on the ridges, and its branches are more 

 spreading, so that, when attaining any size, the foliage 

 becomes so heavy as to force the slender stem to bend 

 over to the ground, causing an ascending habit in the 



