60 XL, LEGUMiNos.f;. [JacJcsonia, 



w 



and* Clarence river, Wilcox ; also in the collection of Sydney woods, of the Paris Exhihition, 



11.117. ' 



Var. macrocarpa. Poil rather longer, at leiif^th nearly glabrous. I can find no other dif- 

 fereiice.— J", cupu^iferay Meissn. in Bot. Zeit. 1855, 27.* 



"^(V. Australia. Between Moore and Murchison rivers, Drmnmondy Qf/i ColL «. 11; 

 Murchisoa river, OJdfield, 



^ 19. J, restioides, Meissn. in PL Preiss. i. 46. Stems erect, branched, 

 virgate, rush-like, terete or nearly so, sulcate, silky-pubescent when young, 

 at length glabrous, 1 to 2 ft. high, tlie barren branches rigid but not spines- 

 ant.^ Flowers few, on very short pedicels along the upper branches or in 

 terminal racetnes. Bracteoles small, lanceolate, below the calyx. Calyx 

 silky-viUous,about5llines long, the tube nea;-ly one-third as long as the lobes 

 but without pronilneut ribs, the lobes apparently persistent but not seen in 

 fruit. Standard large, shortly exceeding the calyx; wings shorter; keel 

 much shorter. Ovary stipitate. Pod not seen. 



^ "W. AustraUa. Swau Kiver, Drammond, \st ColL and n. 263; Preiss, ti, 1079; 

 Darling range, Collie. 



r — 



20. J. velutina, Benth. Branches in our speciihens elongated, simple, 

 rather thick, sulcate but scarcely angular, shortly velvety-|3ubesceut, Avithout 

 barren branchlets. Flowers in lateral clusters or very short racemes. Brac- 

 teoles small, subulate. Calyx pubescent or shortly villous, nearly 4 lines 

 long, the tube very short, the lobes deciduous. Standard exceeding the 

 calyx, but not so large as in J. resiioides ; wings and keel shorter and nearly 



equal to each other. Ovary stipitate, densely covered with lonj? hairs. Pod 

 not seen. 



W, AustraUa. Swan River, Old/ie/d. The specimens insufficient for a full descrip- 

 tion, but not referable to any other species. 



Lehmanui 



A slinib or uiulerslirub 



ot J to la it., With erect braiichinjr stems, silky-piibescent when youn!,^ at 

 length g ahrous, terete or slightly compressed, striate, sulcate or almost an- 

 gular, all leafless and unarmed, or rarely with one or two short, simple or 

 divaricately-furked, spinescent, barren branchlets near the base. Flowers 

 few, along the upper slender branches. Pedicels as long as the calyx or 

 rather sliorter, with very minute bracteoles about the middle. Calyx minutely 

 silky-pubesccnt, 4 to 5 lines long, the lobes deciduous and the buds not pro- 

 mmently angular. Petals shorter than 'the calyx, the keel about as long as 

 the standard Ovary stipitate. Pod ovate, acuminate, 5 to 6 lines long, on 

 a stipes of about 1 line, 



7)rl!!^;„w^*7lw^ ^i"" c«°'^^'' ^?'"'^' ^- ^'■"^^ ^^'^^ ^^^^^ PetHeds) ; Swan River, 

 lfZZ7 T^- T'^ "• ^V ^""""^S "^^^' ^'■''^''' «• 1077 ; towards the Great Bijrht, 



ft™ in itJf" ^ fl '''™' t '°r"','^ '^- '"'""°"' ^'tJi '^- <^»9^^fata, differing from the 

 l™ nn 1 f / r' '''*"■'? "'°"^ ^""^ '^••''°'=''^* rather than tk.Iy racemose, and 



larger pods ; and from J angufata ^n the calyx not nearly so angular in the bud, vvith-Jeci- 



dmens h.v; Sh^n ^ ''r u/""^ ?* '^' ^*^"^^^'^' ^ '" '^- ^-^^>-osa. The southern spe- 



22. J.racemosa, 3fm,«. /« Pi p,.,^,,^ ^j 212. An undershrub or 



slinih ot^^ to 1 ft, with erect virgate branching stems, silky-pubesccnt when 

 young, at length ghibrous, terete or slightly compressed, sometimes scarcely 



I 



4 



