Livistona,] CXXXIII. PALME. 147 
not so ciue jile as in Z. humilis and not so small. Inner perianth 
when dry. s globular. — Wend . and Drude in Linnæa, xxxix. 232 ; 
Bot. Mag. t. 6274 eee australis, R. Br. Pend. 267 ; L. inermis, 
Wendl. sath Drude, dse 
nsland. Woods, W. Hill; Rockhampton (Moore's Creek Range), Thozet. 
N. S. Wales. Poesia Ralston 
Victoria, Snowy Range, A Mueller. I refer this here on the iin bie be 9 
F. Mueller, Fragm. There m js ony a single small leaf preserved in his h 
barium which looks somewhat differe 
The specimen figured in the Botanical Magazine was pues at poy ni m 
collected by C EAD. probably d piden e rich 
not meh had access to Marti or they refer to a Plate z 2 australis whi 
_Orver CXXXIV. PANDANEJE. (Typical Tribe.) 
wers dicecious, closely packed in dense spikes or heads, of which 
ermina 
several mat al spike or raceme or ecl solitary with a leafy or 
coloured braet under e ach. Perianth none. Males consisting of 
nu 
in g TOUS, sessile, — the rhachis and often M qure po pei 
teelled, evi l ovule scie from the base, o 
eas the Old World and 
maging e ve character applies only to the typical tribe limited to the 
Maly a m tropical : morka i xe rs PA: frica, and islands of the — group. 
extensive range go an d South Pacific, the two Australian genera having ^ne 
1 sers into which the drupes in some species are united have been gno 
many-celled dru It seems however more 
log i rit th era dupes othe gut p pos pes vevalting See i fun ihe sage 
ly come necessary to use the term 
id 
