Casuarina. | CX. CASUARINEJE. 199° 
alia. St. Vinesaio Gulf, Blandowski; Onkaparinga range, Mount 
nie Cos er Mueller ; Kanga »o island Waterhouse "s 
W. Aus vy King George's s Sound and adjoining districts uh cones usually 
very regul Me gp long.in some ied mens, above 1 in. in oth rown, 
Drimmiond i “ah co P) n. n. SAT i oret id and others; Kalgan i "Tweed rivers, 
river, coll, 
5s above ed 1 j po 8 and C. Baate , Mig. Rev. Cas. 37, t. 3 C, 
referred to C. suberosa as varieties by Mi DC. Prol xvi. ii. 33 38, both rud West 
Australia, appear to me both to belong ay fer to C. o not understand why 
Miquel reduced this to Aiton’s C. stricta, hich byth haracter given in the Hortus 
Kewensis “ vaginis multifidis” is contradiction to the “ vaginis 7-fidis" of C. equiseti- 
Tha, as mv as from the inspection-of the original specimen is reni Labillardiére's 
vis, notwithsta: ict e inapplicability of Aiton 
sa, a low shru ub with the branchlets smaller and more slen der than i in = 
et 
E 
c 
= 
s 
et 
E 
B 
E, 
o 
= 
FE 
[c] 
in 
"a 
ed 
e 
— 
o9 
E 
A 
zA 
i] 
$ 
^" 
= 
5 
-$ 
A 
e+ 
on 
e 
[c] 
mM. 
Bs 
22 
wry 
; . Cas. 64, ; . . . ; 6, pumua, 
and Dietr. ; Miq. Rev. Cas. 66, ^ A C.; C. dumosa, A. Cunn. Herb.—Port Jackson to 
the Blue. Mountains, Sieber, n ; Argyle County, A. Cunningham's Twofold Bay, 
De S esa river, and DARE. Port "Phillig F. Mueller ; North west interior of Victoria, 
EE C. Fraseriana, Mig. Rev. Cas. 59, t. 6 D, and in DC. Prod. 
ii. 987 partly. A "all erect dicecious shrub or small tree, nearly 
allied to C. distyla, and very difficult to distinguish from it without the 
cones. ‘These are in the typical ba. nearly globular, 2 in. diameter, 
i sal protub 
r more again 
Museum are more Md the pie ones but larger with more numerous 
parts to the whorl.— paro in PROP, SON MEAN 
NN. mame orge's vers d, Preiss, n D F. Mue vni Oldfield.—The 
cm requires further ol idea from better s seeps sette 1E 
C. torulosa with the V Wade and whorls of C. ata, En ought ees to be referred 
to the following sectio 
_ BECT. 9. Me e nu: —Whorls (of stem-angles, sheath-teeth and 
flowers) 4- or 5-merous, rarely 6-merous. Cone-valves rarely apie 
nent beyond the thick "blond obtuse dorsal protuberances, whic 
Véry rugose or divided into tubercles. 
10. C. nana, in Spreng. Syst. Veg. iii. 804. A densely branched 
erect dicecious s dena “the branchlets short slender and terete, the ribs 
Mi iq. Rev. Cas. 29, t. 2 B, and in DC. Prod. xvi. ii. 340. 
