3 Dryandra. | CIV. PROTEACER. 583 
. D. peres - Br. Prot. Nov. 99. Stems very short o 
. the nl within the head iberia and narrow. shorter than 
- the involucre, about 14 in. long, loosely villous or pubesodin verd the 
middle, glabrous towards the end, the very narrow lim ong. 
Style etd the perianth, with a long furrowed stigmati . Cap- 
sule ain t 1 in. broad.—Meissn. in Pl. Preiss. i. 599, and in DC. Prod. 
. 480 
LR. Bro own, the outer integuments of doi aie r faces of f the two i are free from the 
seeds and from each other (or separable), forming a double plate between the seeds. 
4 teridifolia, R. Br. in Trans. Linn. Soc. x. 215, Prod. 399. 
i Stems very short and thick, densely tomentose and villous. Leaves 
) : 5 
3500 ; D. p ehnifolia, R. Br., in Trans. Linn. Soc. x. 2 oi. H9. 
D. nervosa, R. B. in Sw eet, Fl. rca 92, Prot. aes ayi iom 
Eon PI. ecu i. 600, and in DC. Prod. xiv. 481; Bot. Mag 
e's c “oF djoining districts frequent, R. Brown, 
pW. Australia. King Georg nd, n. 131, 4th coll. n. 320, 5th coll. n. 423, Preiss, 
axter, A. ‘Ching | umm s and to Cape Arid, 
m, 512, and others; scrubby plains from sing Pte angos mi to do not ap- 
Maxwell. The br ` adth of the leaf-segment 
_ pear ^ be sufficiently coustant to es stablish distinct varieties. 
A low shrub, the villous 
7. D. calophylla, R. Br. ov. 40. 
stems pe very short and Bik e a rather longer and pro 
