136 XCIII. LABIATE. [ Ajuga, — 
Floral leaves entire or with very few coarse teeth, and smaller or : 
narrower than the flowerless ones. Flowers 5 lines to 1 in. long . 1. A. australis. 
Floral leaves like the stem ones, Md LAUD sinuate-toothed and ru- 
gose. Flowers not exceeding 3 lin .. 2. A. sinuata. 
tralis, R. Br. Prod. 503. A perennial, more or less p - 
bescent or v villous without stolones, with erect or ascending simple 
stems from 2 or 3 in. to above 1 ft. long, flowering pes om t vie 
SUES Keppel l Bay, R. Brown pon sles, 4. Cunningham ; Port Curtis 
Af llioray; Rockingham Bay and Rockhampton, Dallachy and others ; Moreton an 
C. Stuart; Mount Faraday, Mitchell 
N. S. Wales. Port Jackson e the Blue Mountains, R. Brown and others; 
Lachlan river, A. bine nd ; from thence and the Dade’ 6 ote Barrier 
Range, oe and other a others New England, C. Stuart; fastis Macleay 
t 
ictoria. Near Melbourne, Adamson; Yarra, Broken and Murray rivers, F. Mueller 
Wien Ett dHaledig mouth of the. Glenelg, Allitt; Ballarook Forest, e 
ia. PN | 2 damp meadows, &c. thronghout the colony, J. D. Hooker. 
e Murray to St. Vincent’s Gul f, F. Mueller and others; 
Moat B Searle, inem: prin, island, Waterhouse. 
The characters on which I had ad formerly, from the examination of few and some of 
them very imperfect specimens, distinguished four ideiei distributed into two 
|ui peg have entirely broken down by the comparison of the numerous specimens nov 
T m 0 
genevensis, and never broad and imbricate as in A. pyramidalis. In some of the 
Australian va letics the flowerless leaves are almost entirely aae large and on Jong — 
$, and the floral leaves lanceolate or oblong, scarcely toot and not twice as . 
trei de ag passage from the radical to the floral ones which are all several — 
as long as e. flowers. Then a s to size and indumentum, some specimens from t 
