LI 
46 CVIII. EUPHORBIACE®, [ Euphorbia, 
and smooth, the seeds pitted, is said to be now common in cultivated ground in Ne 
uth Wales and West Australia, and probably in other colonies. 
Euphorbia Brownii, Baill. Adans. vi. 290, was described from a specimen witho 
flowers, believed to have been brought by Baudin's Expedition from the West coast 
T nia. It remai e 
Euphorbia at all, and the station, like others attached 
n. 
is ia to plants of the Baudin 
Expedition, is very little to be relied upo 3 
SECT. 1. ANIsopHyLLuM, Roxb.—Herbs, either annual or with a 
perennial base, usually much branched and often prostrate. Leaves all 
z 
The species of this section run very much one into another, and are difficult to define. 
It is possible, therefore, that some of the following, founded upon a small number ot 
specimens may prove to be varieties only, "s 
l. E. atoto, Forst. ; Boiss. in DC. Prod. xv. ii. 12, A glabrous. 
diffuse or procumbent perennial of 1 to 1} ft., the primary stems thi 
and hard, the branches more slender and sometimes dichotomo 4 
Leaves opposite, shortly petiolate, broadly oblong or rarely narrow, 
obtuse or mucronulate, more or less cordate and usually unequally $0: 
0 
the glands sagas oblong, with very narrow scarcely distin 
borders. Capsules glabrous. Seeds smooth.—Baill. Adans. vi. 282; 
E. oraria, F. Muell. in Herb. Kew.; E. levis, Poir.; Boiss.in DC. Prod. 
N. Australia. Water island, Montague Sound, N.W. Coast, A. Cunningham; 
Port Essington, Armstrong; La Grange Bay, Hughan; Port Darwin, Schultz, n. 601; | 
Gulf of Carpentaria, R. Brown. 
ensland. Sandy Cape, R. Brown; Port Curtis, M‘Gillivray ; Isles off Ca 
Flattery and Moreton island, F. Mueller; Sir C. Hardy’s island, Henne ; Rockingha 
Bay, Dallachy. 
dose plant, found also on the coasts of E. India, the Archipelago, and the Pacif 
9. 
