Goodeyiia.'] i^Xiv. goodenovie.^. 77 



Victoria- Murray arid Avoca rivers, F. Mueller, 



S.Australia. Murray river, F, Mueller; Lake Torrens to Wills' and Cooper's 

 Crcelis, Howites Expedition. ^ 



W. Australia ? Stokes Inlet, MaxwelL A single small specimen (in Herb. F. Muell.) 

 T^'ith large flowers appears to be this species, but insufficient for positive identification. 



This species has usually the large flowers of G. elongata and G. pinnatijida, fj-om which 

 u may be readily distinguished by the glabrous indusium, as pointed out bv F, Mueller, as 

 yrel as by the narrow leaves. It is very nearly allied to G. coro}iopifona,'^\^mTvg chiefly 

 m the lar^e flowers. Some forms of the western G. JUiformis come also very near to it, 

 oat besides the small flowers the seeds in that species are rarely winged and then irregularly 



SOi 



ar. sericea. Clothed all over or sprinkled with silky hairs. To this belong the northern 

 and most of the N. S. Wales specimens. 



ar. glandidosa. More or less glandular-pubescent. Darling river, Dallachy i Goyinga 

 mountains, Victonan Ex;!^ edition. 5 > y J o 



60. G. filiformis, i?. Br. Prod. 578. A slender annual or tufted per- 

 ennial, glabrous or sprinkled with a few hairs in the typical form, the in- 

 florescence sometimes glandular, and occasionally a little wool in the axils. 



eaves m the typical form linear or filiform, but in some varieties more or 

 less lanceolate, especially the radical ones, which are often 2 to 3 in. long, 

 stem ones few and smaller, all entire. Flowering stems ascending or 

 j^it^ct, -^to 1 ft, long or more, sometimes ending in an umbel-like tuft of 

 jeayes and peduncles. Flowers yellow, usually small. Peduncles l-flowcred, 

 ii'norm, without bracteoles. ' Calyx-lobes linear. Corolla glabrous outside, 

 rarely above^^ in. long, tiie adnate part of the tube with a hollow protube- 

 |"auce sometimes forming a short spur at the base of the calyx, the lobes all 



i^oadly winged, the 2 upper ones separated low down. Dissepiment short; 

 o^^ules not numerous. Capsule small. Seeds few, orbicular, with broad 



^^Pr^ ®^!^^^™^^ irregularly winged.— DC. Prod. vii. 513 ; De Vr. Gooden. 

 1^4, but with a wrong station ; Sccevola umhellata, De Vr. in PI. Preiss. i. 

 ^U; Aillya umhellata, De Vr. Gooden. 76. t. 13; G. elongata, De Vr. in 

 ^^- rreiss. i. 412. imf nf T.nK;ii 



W 



P^; .. • ' ^^^y ^ reiss, n. J4i;5, l^Z'd, i^6\}^ l^60. l^OU j luue, DmuKwuuu, uuu .Txui- 



™ ''''''> ^^'dfi^^d; Warrenup, Maxwell. 



ar pulchella. Glabrous, softly hairy or hispid. Leaves linear-spathulate or lanceolate. 

 Swan ^- f ' Benth. in Hueg. Enum. 71 ; DC. Prod. vii. 515 ; Velleia lanceolata, LindK 

 and '^1?' ^^ ' ^^ ^'^- ^^^^^^' 17^ (partly, for the specimens referred to in that work, 



sneci^^"*- ^a«tf.?o/aira by De Vriese in the herbaria qnoted, belong to eight different 



dian^a'v))' 9^^"^^^^^"^ cycloptera, &. glauca, G. hispida, G. Jiliforms, Calogyne Berar- 

 PulchU ^y^'^opotamica, Shjlidinm leptorkizum, and Ya?ideUia puhescens). The var. 



Brum ^PP^^^« to be fully as common as the filiform one, and to pass gradnally into it. 

 hnf fi. ^ specimens, n. 185, are remarkably hirsute; his n. 408 has very smaH flowers, 



^ ^^e specimens are imperfect. 



L 



F 



SDet^ ^ ^' ™ieroptera, F. Muell. Fragm. iii. 34. The specimens of this 

 leav'^^ ''^^^sist of 2 small fragments, apparently verj- near to G. glauca. Tiie 

 the i''^'"^ ^^anting. The flowers are of the size of those of G. glauca, but 

 e J^^'y^-^eeth are shorter, and the wings of the corolla-lobes are narrower, 



the ^^"^^^^ ^^ *^^ "PPei" ^o^es, which is broad. The dissepiment of 



ovary reaches above the middle, and the capsule is rather longer than in 



