i 
LI 3 
118 XLVIII. MYRTACES. [Kunzen 
Klotzsch in Otto and Dietr. Allg. Gartenzeit. iv. 113 (according to Schauer); | 
Callistemon — 7 Lindl. Bot. t. Reg. 1838, t. 7 ; Callistemon Hainesii, — 
uell. Fragm. iii. 153 | 
alia. GC the eastward of King George’s Sound, Barter ; between - 
Arid A and d One Le Grand, Maxwell. This species has the veneti were: ovules, 
rescence, and long jaiari stamens of Callistemon, but x and as. e 
much more those of Kunzea, thus closely scu ride the two genera. 
20. CALLISTEMON, R. Br. 
L 
base rt erect or contracted; 1 5, imbricate, more 
scarious, a. als 5, orbicular, spreadin r than the calyx- 
l Stamens much longer than the petals, indefinite, usually In seve 
rve-like margins and pinnate veins. Flowers show 
pale yellow or crimson, in been oblong or cylindrical a at first S 
but the axis very soon growing out into a leafy shoot, the lower leaves 
the new shoot usually edged to dry yey aia scales, a e 
closely sessile or slightly immersed in the woody rhachis. Bra 
dry and deciduous, rarely here an shave more persistent o? Gre 
Stamens i in most species 3 to 1 in. long or even m 
s is confined to Mask As h aget ën observed by R. Brown, it wer ve 
e amne “of Callistemon, as thus limited, = a remarkable ge in their ! 
miri. SS differing but in the breadth and consistence of the ves kei in 
length an of the stamens. They might, indeed, almost be lerne 
Eier wee 
Stamens red. 
Western species. 
Lea e ar gc? Flower-spikes dense, SR 
usua Er villou tame RL or very shortly 5- 
adelp TL. 1, C. apecioti 
led thick but obscurely ve 
Flow r- ikes ot 
dense, usually glabrous. Deech? not EH MS. p d 9. C. phænicei: 
