256 Etvart, White, Rees and Wood: 



BossiAEA MiCROPHYLLA. Sui. "" Siiiall-leaved Bossea." (Legumi- 



nosae.) 



Eastern slope of Brisbane Ranges, P. R. H. St. John, 

 17/9/1911. 



The most southerly locality in Victoria hitherto recorded for 

 this species. 



Capparis umbonata, Lindl. (Capparideae.) 



Napier Broome Bay, North-West Australia, G. F. Hill, Dec, 

 1909, No. 32. 



The specimen has adult fruits, and Bentham apparently had 

 unripe fruits only for examination. Hence a description is 

 appended. 



Fruit of Capparis ^imhnnata. — Fruit usually about 1-^ inches 

 in diameter. Glabrous, woody, indehiscent, globular when 

 ripe, with no protuberance on top. Seeds about 5 to 10 em- 

 bedded in a hard, almost woody, pulp. Stipes 2J to 3 inches 

 long. 



Casuarixa luehman>.ii, R. T. Baker. •' Bull Oak."' (Casua- 



rineae.) 



Growing on plain between Brisbane Ranges and Parwan, 

 P. R. H. St. John, October 17th, 1911. • 



The furthest southern locality recorded for this species in 

 Victoria. 



Chloris abyssinica, Hochst, " Abyssinian Rhodes-Grass "' 

 (Gramineae). 

 Pearcedale, May, 1911. Ch. Cox.; Kerang, Victoria, July, 

 1911, per Law, Somner and Co. 



This useful grass, a native of Abyssinia, has been frequently 

 cultivated, and is now evidently becomiug naturalised in this State. 



C-oRYPHA, L. (Muss. Cliff. 11. (173G), Gen. Ed. 1.), (;Palmae). 



CoRYPHA ELAT,^, Hoxb. in Hort. Beng., 25; Fl. Ind., 17G. 

 Determined by 0. Becarri. 



Lower Gilbert River, Queensland, J. 0. RuUy. 

 This characteristically East Indian species is the sole repre- 

 sentative of the tienus in Australia. 



