Neue Litteratur. 19 



brought Boronia rhomboidea , B. pilosa , Mühlenbeckia stenophylla, 

 Pomaderris phylicifolia, Didiscus humilis and Uncinia tenella. Height 

 of the plant above one foot; branchlets quadrangular ; majority of 

 leaves varying in length between 1/2 and 3/4 inch, somewhat concave, 

 more crowded than those of most other species. Fruit bearing calyx 

 fuUy one-sixth of an inch long; seed central. The characteristic of 

 the one-seeded fruit is exceptional in the genus, but may not be ab- 

 solutely constant, as the ovary is fourcelled. This species is in some 

 respects allied to H. lanceolata, but must systematically be placed near 

 H. salsoloides , from which it ditfers in being of much more robust 

 growth and perfectly glabrous , in more numerous much larger and 

 particularly broader leaves, and perhaps also in form and structure of 

 the fruits, that of H. salsoloides remaining still unknown. 



The same collector, while under engagement to the writer, has 

 afforded the opportunity of recording most of the following plants as 

 recently traced to far southern localities in New South Wales: — 



Hibbertia saligna; Clyde. Dysoxylon Muelleri ; Currawang. Bertya 

 gummifera; Braidwood. Casuarina nana; Genoa. Dodonsea multijuga; 

 Shoalhaven. Mirbelia grandiflora ; Braidwood. Bossisea Kriamensis ; 

 Braidwood. Albizzia pruinosa. Acacia vestita ; Genoa. A. glaucescens ; 

 Genoa. Eucalyptus stricta; Candelo. Schizomeria ovata; Braidwood. 

 Actinotus Gibbonsii; Genoa. Astrotricha longifolia; Currawang. 

 Cryptandra Scortechinii ; Braidwood. Petrophila sessilis; Braidwood. 

 Persoonia lanceolata. P. oxycoccoides. Hakea saligna ; Mount ürome- 

 dary. Pimelea collina; Braidwood. Glossogyne tenuifolia ; Clyde. Chilo- 

 carpus australis; Bulli. Polymeria calycina; Clyde. Chloanthes parvi- 

 flora ; Braidwood. Euellia australis ; Shoalhaven. Prostanthera Sieberi ; 

 Genoa. Epacris Calvertiana ; Braidwood. Dendrobium Beckleri ; Milton. 

 D. teretifolium ; Clyde. Thelymitra virosa; Braidwood. Haemodorum 

 planifolium ; Clyde. Dianella coerulea; Braidwood. Xanthorrhsea hastilis ; 

 Genoa. Juncus vaginatus ; Braidwood. Aristida ramosa ; Braidwood. 

 Agrostis breviglumis; Braidwood. 



The above named Eucalyptus stricta was found by Mr. Tyrone 



White; Hakea saligna, by Miss M. Bäte; Chilocarpus australis, by Mr. 



W. K i r 1 n. In all now of more than 200 New South Wales plants 



have records been given dux'ing the last few years in the transactions 



of the local Linnean Society as regards their approximate southern 



limits.l 



Petit, E.j Additamenta catalogi plantarum vascular. indig. Corsicarum edit. 



Mrs. de MarsiUy. (Botanisk Tidsskrift. [Kj0benhavn.] Bd. XIV. 1885. 



Heft 4. p. 244.) 



, Skildring af de plantegeographiske Forhold paa Korsika sammt nogle 



Tilf0jelser til Korsikas Flora. (Meddelelser fra den botaniske Forening i 

 Ki0benhavn. 1885. No. 7. p. 156.) 

 Petzold, Bemerkungen zur Flora der Mansfelder Seen. (Deutsche botanische 



Monatsschrift. III. 1885. No. 6.) 

 Pin, C, Flore elementaire, comprenant des notions de botanique, la Classi- 

 fication et la description sommaire des familles et des genres de plantes 

 qui croissent naturellement en France. 5e edition. 8°. 220 pp. av. fig. Paris 

 (Andre— Guedon) 1885. 1 fr. 15 c. 



Poisson, J., Presente des exemplairea d'Amsinckia lycopsoides recoltes aux 

 environs de Paris. (Bulletin de la Societe botanique de France. T. VII. 

 1885. No. 5.) 

 Reichenbacli, H. d. L. und Reichenbach, H. G. fll., Deutschlands Flora. 

 Decade No. 291 u. 292. 40. Leipzig (A. Abel) 1885. a M. 2,50, color. a M. 4,50. 



, Deutschlands Flora. Wohlfeile Ausgabe. Serie 1. Heft 23 u. 24. 80. 



Leipzig (A. Abel) 1885. _ a M. 1,60. 



, Icones florae germanicae et helveticae, simul terrarum adjacentium, 



ergo mediae Europae. Tom. XXII. Decas 21 et 22. 4o. Leipzig (A. Abel) 



1885. a M. 2,50, color. a M. 4,50. 



Spiessen, von, Zusätze und Bemerkungen zur 15. Auflage von Garcke's 



Flora von Deutschland. (Deutsche botanische Monatsschrift. III. 1885. No. 7/8.) 



2* 



