BY THE REV. W. WOOLLS. 



53 



1. E. tereticornis, Sm. 



2. E. rostrata, Schlecht 



3. E. signata 



4. E. variegata 



5. E. citriodora, Hook. 



6. E. brevi folia 



II. 



13. E. tessalar 



16. E. poly car fa 



17. E. terminalis 



18. E. tectifica 



19. E. leptophleba 



20. E, microtheca 



26. E. fibrosa 



27. E. exserta 



30. E. crebra 



32. E. aurantiaca 



I. Leiophloi^e. 



7. E. dichromophloia 



8. /?. hemilampra 



9. i?. bigalerita 



10. i£. latifolia 



11. E. platyphylla 



12. ^. aspera 



HEMIPHLOIiE. 



14. ^. semicorticata 

 15. i?. confertiflora 



III. Rhytiphloi^e. 



2\. E. patellar™ 



22. ^. trachyphloia 



23. ^. fo'co/or A.C. 



24. i?. populnea 



25. ^ ferruginea 



IV. Pachyphloi^:. 



28. i7. ptychocarpa 



29. #. tetrodonta 



V. Schizophloi^]. 



31. i?. melanophloia 

 VI. Lepidophloi^e. 



33. ^. phcenicea 

 34. i£. melissodora. 



Sectio dubia. 



35. 2?. brachyandra 37. i?. odontocarpa 



36. i£. clavigera, A.C. 38. ^. i~>achyphylla 



As a further assistance in describing species of Eucalyptus, the 

 Baron next suggested that attention should be paid to the shape 

 and opening of the anthers ; and in his Fragmenta Phytographiaz 

 Auntralice, Vol. n. (1861), in which he devoted 38 pages to the 

 consideration of the genus, he notes particularly the form and 

 colour of the anthers. I am not aware that any previous botanist 



