Anigozanthos. | CXXIII. AMARYLLIDEEX. 445 
airs, but sometimes woolly-hairy all over or quite glabrous, flat, 
e . long and 
with longer hairs. Perianth 14 to 2 in. long, slightly curved, the 
li h 
form; anthers short, without terminal appendages. Ovules numerous, 
covering the placentas.—Endl. in Pl. Preiss. ii. 26. 
W. Australia. King George's Sound and adjoining districts, F. Mueller, Old- 
field, Maxwell, and others; Swan river, Drummond, 1st coll. n. 747, Preiss, n. 1418, 
Oldfield. 
A. minima, Lehm, Pl. Preiss. ii. 274, which I have not seen, is referred by F. 
Mueller, Fragm. viii. 21, to A. humilis, but apparently only from the character given: 
the narrow leaves, almost capitate inflorescence, and curved perianth would rather 
indicate the A. Preissii. 
subulate bracts, the wool green throughout or yellowish towards the 
base of the flower. Perianth 24 to near 3 in. long, the tube of equal 
breadth or very slightly contracted above the middle, splitting open 
8 
ud LI 
usually reflexed when open. Anthers linear, about as long as the fili- 
orm filaments. Ovules very numerous in each cell covering the 
centas. 
W. Australia. Swan river, Drummond, 1st coll. n. 745, Preiss, n. 1415 ; Vasse 
river, Oldfield; Pinjarrah, J. S. Price; Busselton, Pries. 
7. A. Manglesii, D. Don in Sweet, Brit. Fl. Gard. ser. 2, t. 265. 
Stems 2 to 3 ft. high, slightly and loosely woolly towards the base, 
uite glabrous. Flowers, the largest in the genus, in a nes 
unilateral raceme, on pedicels usually of 2 to 3 lines, the plu- 
ol very dense, green except on the adnate base where it is 
e 
n hairs or ciliate scales near the base. Anthers linear much longer than 
