| Epilobium] LI. ONAGRARIEJ. 305 
. opposite, 
- üways broader and the teeth less prominent than in E junceum. Flowers 
" uw as in that species.— Hook. f. Fl. Tasm. i. 118, and Handb. N. Zeal. 
| H. 79. 
Victoria. “ Australia Felix,” F. Mueller. 
Tasmania. Abundant in many parts of the island, J. D. Hooker. 
S. Australia. Glenelg river andBugle Range, F. Mueller. 
i King George's Sound, R. Brown, Drummond, 2nd Coll. n. 239; 
D 
. Perl distinct, seems sometimes almost to pass into E junceum, on the one hand, an 
ler more into E Billardierianum on the other. 
4 E. tetragonum, Linn. Spec. Pl. 495. Stems erect, 1 to 2 ft. high, 
glabrous or slightly hoary-pubescent, and more or less angular, especially in 
- fe lower portion, with raised lines decurrent from the leaves. Leaves sessile 
Or nearly so, from ovate-lanceolate to narrow-oblong, the lower ones opposite, 
"uy larger, thinner, with more prominent veins than in Æ. glabellum. 
Hes i$ mueh more common in New Zealand than in Australia, and, — 
. NIS small, the calyx-lobes rarely above 2 lines long and the petals not 
. Ruch longer, Capsule often very long.— Ser. in DC. Prod. iii. 43; Hook. f. 
JL Tasm. i. 117. : 
N.S. Wales 
der. 
: Common in moist, especially alpine situations, J. D. Hooker. 
i ler. 
he raised decurrent lines on the stems are 
: ropean and Asiatic ones, and I have some doubts whether they 
not be Juxuriant forms of E. glabellum, and whether the true E. tetragonum is really 
> except here and there where introduced from Europe. 
; Billardierianum, : : . iii. 41. Glabrous or mi- 
d hoary-pubescent, especially in the upper portion. Stems usually nearly 
. hig : 
ead of the Gwydir, Leichhardt; Ben Lomond and Arne river, 
i w Common in al ine situations, J. D. Hooker. à aid 
18 nearly that of È. glabellum, which by some is included in sien Nieft 
leaves are more crowded and the flowers nearly as large as in E. pallidi- 
a 
or 
i eayes and large 
» from a decumbent base, erect, terete, 2 to 3 ft. high, glabrous 
pubescent in the upper portion. Leaves opposite, except the upper 
; x 
