;? 



4S LXIY. GOODEKOYIE.^. [Velkk. 



and narrowed into a rather long petiole. Peduncles axillary, paniculate, 

 with opposite bracts at the forks, precisely like the paniculate scapes of V> 

 trinervis, but the flowers and capsules usually larger. — Eidhalesm-acrophjUa, 

 Lindl. Bot. Keg. 1S40, Misc. 54, and 1841, t. 3 ; De Vr. Gooden. 170. t 

 33 ; Mamid. Botanist, t. 209 ; Goodenia macropJwlla, F, MuelL Pragm. vi. 

 IL 



Mr. Australia. Brummond, n. 141, Zrd ColL n, 189 ; Kalgan river, OJdfield. The 

 station, " Sydney, Clowes" giveu by De Vriese, is owing to a mistake in Herb. Hook. 



\a.v.foliosa. Stems thick. Leaves crowded, obovate or broadly ciuieate, coarsely 

 toothed, scarcely petiolate, but contracted into a short, broad, stem-clasping base, the axils 

 woolly. — Drummond^ n. 182; summit of Stirling Range, F, Mueller. 



Euthales filiforwis, De Yr. in PI. Preiss. i. 414 and Goodeu. 171, from W. Australia, 

 Freiss, n, 1889,' described from imperfect specimens without flower, and which I have not 

 seen, is not recognizable, and may belong to some very diffeient genus, 



6. V. paradoxa^ B. Br, Prod, 580. Glabrous, pubescent or hirsute. 

 Leaves radical, petiolate, from broadly obovate and under 2 in. to narro\v- 

 oblong and above 4 in. lon«:, coarsely tootlied or almost entire, sometiiues 

 nlmost lyrate. Scapes ascending or erect, J to 1^ ft. high, dichotomously or 

 triehotomously branched. Bracts opposite at the forks, free, the lower ones 

 sometimes ovate and deeply lobed at the base, the upper ones small, lin^si*! 

 and entire. Sepals 5, free, oblong-linear or lanceolate or the outer larger 

 one ovate-lanceolate and sometimes 6 lines long, the others smaller. Corolla 

 yellow, pubescent outside, the hollow protuberance of the tube usually pro- 

 duced into a spur, sometimes 4 lines long, sometimes very small or obsolete; 

 lobes all winged, the 2 upper ones separate much lower than the others. 

 Tndusium very large. Capsule shorter than the outer sepah. Seeds broadly 

 winged.~DC. Prod. vii. 518 ; De Vr. Gooden. 172 ; Plook, f. FL Tasm. i- 

 233; Bot. Eeg. t. 971. 



Queensland. Dawson river, F. Mueller; Port Cnrtis, M'GUUvraT/ : Plains of the 

 Condaniine, Lelchhardt ; Ipswieh, Kernst ; ^Varwick, Beckler, 



N. S. "Wales. Cow-pasture plains, R, Brown ; Mud^ee, Woo I Is ; Iji q,u^QlS, M^ J rtliur i 

 from the Murray and Darling to the Barrier Range, Victoria and other Expeditions, aud 

 northward to Richmond river, Fawceii^ New England, C, Stuart. ^ 



Victoria, Port Phillip, R. Brown ; on. the Yarra, F. Mueller ; Glenelg river, R^' 

 dertson ; Creswick, Wkan ; Wimmera, Dallachy, - * 



Tasmania. Port Dalrymple^ R. Brown ; not uncommon in many parts of the island, 



/. i). Hooker. 



S. Australia, Gulf of St. Vincent's, Holdfast Bay, Lofty Ranges, etc., F, Muell^ 

 and others. * '^ 



r. arpfta, E. Br. Prod. 5S0, DC. Prod. vii. 518 ; De Vr. Gooden. 173, from Spencer's *^ 

 Gnlf, R. BrowJif is a small form, with the leaves rather more sharply toothed than usual* 

 but not otherwise different. The western stations given for the species by De Vriese are 

 fonnded upon a mixture of specimens of F, trinervis and of Goodenia fillformis^ ffluca 

 had been glued down upon the same sheet in the ITookerian Herbarium. 



Var. stenoftera^ P. MuelL More divaricate ; flowers rather smaller ; spur very sui^l' °^ 

 none; seeds with a very narrow or scarcely any wing. To this belong the Queensland ^^^ 

 the New England and Richmond river specimens. The spur of the corolla disappears also ^ 

 sometimes on the common Southern form, and is always variable in size. 



7- V. cycnopotamica, F. MuelL Fragm. vi. 7. Sprinkled with afe^ 

 rigid hairs or nearly glabrous. Eadical leaves petiolate, oblanceolate, acutely 



-J 







-^■ 



_ J 



