Bodoncca.'] xxxviii. sapindace^e. 477 



viscosa,x^v.asphnifoJia,l\oQ\,lY\.'Yii^m.\. 55.— TliIs is tlie commonest, perhaps the 

 only form, in Victoria, Tasmania, and S. Australia, and I have seen N. S. "Wales specimens 

 from Port Jackson, and northward to New England, Mount Mitchell, and Mount Aiton. It 

 IS the prevalent form in New Zealand, and some of the Sandwich Island specimens can be 

 piecjscly matched in Australia. J). ohlo^gifoVia, Link, as figured in Bot. Reg. t. 1051, 

 appears to j-cpresent rather a short-leaved form of this variety than a long-leaved L. cnneata, 

 h.asplemfolia, Kudge, in Trans. Liun. Soc. xi. 297, t. 20, DC. Prod. i. 017, judging 

 from N. S. Wales specimens agreeing with the figure, although not authentically named, is 

 an apparently rare form with liiicar-cuneate, 3-toothed leaves, resemhling those of luiuiiant 

 aruwu-up shoots of B. cuneala, hut longer. 



5. D. attenuata. A, Cumu in Field, N, S. Wales, 353. A viscid shrub, 

 closely resembling the narrowest-leaved forms of i). viscosa on the one hand, 

 and almost passing into D. lohulata on the other. Leaves linear or narrowly 

 lincar-cuncate, obtuse, often slightly sinuate-toothed, rather thick and rigid, 

 1-uerved, the lateral veins inconspicuous, 1^ to 2|- in. long in the original 

 form, but sometimes longer. Flowers and ovate sepals of i>. rz^co^/?, in short 

 usually simple racemes. Capside of Z). viscosa, usually intermediate between 

 tlie extremes of the varieties a and Z» of that species. Seeds opaque. — Bot. 



Mag. t. 28C0; R Fre'miana, Miq. in PL Preiss. i. 226; F, MuclL Pragm. 

 i. 72. 



W. S. ^Wales. Blue ]\ronntains, J. Cpnnh?f/ham and others, and apparently cdninion 



westward in the CarHng and Murray desert, Mutanie ranges. Mount Browu, etc.. Herb, F. 

 Mueller. 



Victoria. In the Jlurray desert and N.W. interior, T. Mueller. 

 S. Australia. Towards Spencer's Gulf, Warburion. 



W". Australia. IMoiint Hardy, near York, Prnss, n. 2137; hetween Swan Eiver 

 and King George's Sound, Brtmmovd, Uh Coll., n. 257 ; iu the interior, Roe, The latter 



fvveen tlic whtgs narrow,— New England, C. Stuart ; Mitta-Mitta, Genoa and J]uehan rivers 

 in Victoria, P, Mueller) Kangaroo Island, Water house, Seahj ; Swan ^wcv.Dnimnwnd, 

 n. 203. The foliage nearly resemhies that of -Z>. stenoj^hyUa, which has a very different 

 capsule. 



6. D. cuneata, Rudcje, in Trans. Linn. Soc. xi. 296, t. 19. A miicli- 

 bi-anclied bushy slirub, glabrous, and usually viscid. Leaves obovate or 

 cuueate, usnallv ^ to 1 in. long aud ratlier 'broad, rarely uarrow-cuncate, 

 attainiug li in., rounded, truncate, emargiuate or 3-tootlied at the end, 

 otherwise entire or rarely obscurely tootlied, gradually narrowed into a very 

 sliorlpt.tiole, thin or coriaceous; the lateral veins rarely conspicuous. Ea- 

 cenics short, terminal, scarcely branched, with slender pedicels, or the flowers 

 few in axillary clusters. Sepals ovate-oblong, and capsules of J), vhcosa, the 

 ^ifigs usually not very broad and rather rigid, with the terminal sinus open. 

 -~1JC. Prod. i. 617. 



Queensland. Buniet river and Moreton Bay, F. Mueller. _ ,,.,,. 



N. S. "Wales. Port Jackson, KBrotcn and others; Blue Mountains, MissAtkmson; 

 Diirlfng and Murray desert, Victorian Expedition, ^ 



Victoria- In the Grampians and Buffitlo ranges, Winimera and Murray nvcrs, F. 

 -^^^eUer, inehiding a var. cormcea, with Sfuall, obovate, coriaeeous leaves and small capsules 

 ^Uh broad wings, and a var. riijida, with small, rigid, njoslly obovate kavcs, short pedicels, 

 and rather large capsules with iiaiTow wiiigs. Luxuriant narrow-leaved N. S. Wales speci- 



