f 



Ziena.] 



XXVIIJ, RUTACE^. 305 



f much, sznaller, in a looser cyme. Petals not twice as loug as the calyx.— StradLrooke Islan J. 



Iraser: Moretoa Island, K Muelier. 



^ 



y 2. Z. aspalathoides^ J. Cu?m, Herb. A heath-like shnib, the branches 

 terete and pubescent, but usually with a decurrent g-Iabrous line. Leaflets 3, 

 sessile or with the common petiole so exceedingly short that they appear ver- 

 ticulate, lanceolate or linear, rarely above 3 lines lonj^, or when very luxuriant 

 4' or 5 lines, the margins revolute, glabrous or slightly pubescent. Cymes 

 usually 3-flowered, rather longer than the leaves. Caljx-lobes broad, obtuse 

 or acute. Petals about 2 or 3 times as long. Anthers tipped with a small 

 obtuse appendage.— ^^m^/« Uvujala, F. Muell. PL Vict. i. Ill (in part). 



W. S. M^ales, Wellington Valley, Blue Mountains, and W. branches of Hunter's 

 Kiw, A. Cnnnirufham ; Peele's ranges, Fraser. 



Victoria. Grampians^ A . Cunningham ; barren ridges near Goulburn river, F. Mueller. 



'y 3. Z. pilosa, Rfnige, in Trans. Linn. Sac. x. 293, ^.17. A shrub or 

 mulershrub, the branches tei-ete and dtnisely pubescent or hirsute. Leaflets 

 f J ^vith a short common petiole, linear, oblong or lanceolate, obtuse, -j to f 

 3n. or rarely 1 in. long, the margins recurved or revolute, slightly pubescent 

 or glabrous above, more or less hirsute or toraentose underneath. Flowers 

 small, solitary and nearly sessile or 2 or 3 together on short pedicels. Calyx 

 inrsute, with linear-subnlatc or narrow-lanceolate lobes, nearly as long as the 

 petals and always much naiTower than in any other species. Anthers minutely 

 ^piculate. Cocci hirsute, broader than in most species. — DC. Prod, i, 723 ; 

 ^' pauci/lora, Sm. in l^ees, Cycl. xxxix, ; DC. I.e.; Z. hirsida, DC. I.e.; 

 -^eless. Ic. Sel.iii. t. 50; Boronla Jilrmta, F. Muell, Fragm. i. 101, 



< +i ^' .^^^^es. Port Jaelson and Botany Bay, Banks, R. Brotm, Sleher, n, 283 

 ipartly mixed with Boronia poli/gafifoliay var. 1riphi/!Ia), and many otiicrs. 

 . /***• V^mflora, Less jjubescent ; leaves smaller; flowers and fruit uiuch smaller. Both 

 "^^ Banks' and in B, Brown's collections. 



, ^^' ^\ canpscens. ]\Iorc tonientosc-hirsnte ; leaves narroiv, very tomentose nnderneatb, 

 the margins scareelv reeurvcd ; inflorescenee looser, the peduncles ratber lengtbened and 

 ^-tiowered, but with'the calyx of Z. pilosa— Z. cauescens, R. Br. Herb.— HiJis in the in- 



Z, microphglla, Bonpl. Jard. Slalm. 64, DC. Prod. i. 723, on!j known by an exceedingly 

 sport diagnosis, is probably this species. I did not find it in the Paris herbarium. Z. irtfo- 

 f^^la, Bonpl., mentioned in irardenint' works, is probably this or one other of the common 

 ^ecies met with in gardens. 



5 4- Z. obcordata, A. Cum. in Held, N. S. JFales, 330. A shi-ub of 

 low growth, with elongated diffuse branches, terete and softly hirsute. Leaf- 

 Aets 3, with a very short common petiole, obovate or obcordate, 2 to 4 lines ■ 

 or rarely f in. long, softly pubescent or tomentose above, more hirsute or 

 Velvety and whitish underneath, the margins recurved or revolute. Flowers 

 I |p 3 in the axils, very small, on short slender pedicels, the petals not above 

 J hue and the calyx about half as long with bi-oad and obtuse segments. 

 Jiithers not a2)iculate. Cocci small, glabrous,— J?o;w^m mlnidiflora, F. Muell. 



Fra 



gin. 1. 100. 



Qneensland. Glasshouse Mountains, F. Mueller. 

 • S. IVales. Macquarie nvcr, A. Cunningham. 



5. Z. veronicea, Z MadL Trans. PkiLSoc. Fid. i. 11. A low shi-ub, 

 Clothed all over with a soft close or velvetv tomentum. Leaves all simple. 



VOL. I, 



X 



