DT MER 
CROP TAE ERR ee P ITE YO NH IS EESTI TUE =" 
e trans 
more raised in this one, bu 
Prostanthera. | XCIII. LABIATÆ. 101 
" 
mostly about } in. long. Flowers all axillary, on very short pedicels. 
Bracts linear, half as ong as t yx. Calyx short and broad 
strongly ribbed, glandular-hirsute, scarcely above 2 lines long when in 
frui ips icular eq i 
eo 
o 
d 
wny 
ne. Corolla qu ex- 
of the upper o 
- ceeding the calyx (perhaps not fully deve oped), glabrous or nearly so. 
Anther-appendages adnate, the longer one very shortly free at the end, 
he cell 
about equal, the upper one with a prominent transverse downy line 
Inside at the base, the lower one often emarginate. Corolla fully 
twice as long as the calyx. Anthers with the connective prominent at 
the back, but without any or only very rudimentary appendages. 
Upper lobe of the style short.— Chilodia scutellarioides, R. Br. Prod. 507; 
Benth. in DC. Prod, xii. 558; Bot. Mag. t. 3405. 
N. S. Wales. Port Jackson to the Blue Mountains, R. Brown, Sieber, n. 187 ard 
many others, 
The genus Chilodia was founded mainl upon the absence of the anther-appendages, 
the degree of development of which is very diforent in different species of Prostanthera ; 
, 
h " p second character, the transverse rib inside the calyx, appears to be no more 
ra 
SERIES 3. SuBconcav #.—Leaves (small or narrow) sessile or very 
shortly petiolate, concave or with incurved margins or flat, the psi 
“curved. Flowers all axillary, the floral leaves similar to 
cel] Anthers with one appendage about twice as long as the 
yu cies of this &roup in most cases appear to pass into each other so as to make 
1 
us 
The 
It very difficult to draw any definite lines between them when the specimens are 
numero 
1 i . A shrub of 
t., hoary with appressed hairs, the young shoots silky. Leaves 
i shortly petiolate or nearly sessile, oblong-lanceolate or ane 
15.080 or acute, entire, flat or concave, the margins not dece J 
Pl; larger ones ] to 9 in. ong, the floral ones smaller but similar. 
OWers axi ary, on very short pedicels. Bracts nearly as long as 
