66 CXXVII. LILIACER. [ Laxmannia. 
Var. S get (?). Searious esting bases of the least larger and more woolly 
—L. who Reich Syst. Pflanzenk. 72 (?)—Herbert River, 
Queensland, pam '] have abet e EON Dictrich’s : spei described by Reic 
enbach , but. Ido sm see any character given to distinguish them specifically from 
e L. gracilis, which varia much in the degree of asveletunsatt of the branches, 
foliage, and inflorescen 
L. ramosa, Lindl. Swan Riv. App. 56.—Closely resembles L. 
gracilis in its long much-branched slender almost filiform stems with 
Jagged, the blade very narrow and rarely 3 in. long. as eni d 
sessile within the leafy tufts, the outer scarious bracts very few, entire, 
shorter than the perianth, the inner ones under the flower shorter, 
ge 
ctoria. Glen pele River, Robertson ; Grampians, F. Mueller, Sullivan ; Wilson's 
aeda F. Mue 
mania. Heaths places ; abundant in some of the northern parts of the island, 
J. D. Hooker. 
s. Encounter Bay, Whitaker ; Lo Ranges, F. d 
. Australia. Swan River, remp ta Ta coll. and n. 795 a en jen, an 
Murchison River, Oldfield ; Phillips Kalgan Rivers, Maz: 
Decaisne figures the inner naponi of the perianth as poet Woga i xg the 
outer, and I poem occasionally found them so. gone cially in Murchison r speci- 
mens, but xd are mier st frequently as as decidedly shorter, although per ud p» 
specim 
Re bee tud SCR ens described by Decaisne were most 
pro feast 8 Day. 
To E lla, F. Muell. Herb.—A dwarf plant, rarely above 
lin. high, allied to L. sessilis and perhaps a variety, but much less 
d. Leaves shorter and not so fine, occupying the art 
ee ee d n DEM NN 
