Crinum.] CXXIII. AMARYLLIDEZ. 455 
long, the — of the limb about 23 to 3 in. long; and much broader 
than in any other Australian species, 3 in. in som specimens, nearly 
lin.in others, the whole size of the flower leiden variable. Fila- 
ments from 3 to 3 as lo ong as the segments; anthers scarcely above 3 
lines, —Amaryllis ‘australasica, Ker in Bot. Reg. t. 426; A. australis, 
ied —€— ii. 54. 
. S. Darling river, Mrs. Ford, and thence to Cooper's Creek, Viet 
and a other pedis; Murray river, C. Stuart ; * from the paddock of Mr. [idc 
e 
Australia. Flinder’s range, F. Mueller; in the interior, lat. 32° to 22°, 
AM ‘Douall Stua es i y 
There is ai Banksian koe a specimen laid in as from New Holland, R. 
Brown, it; no pu onding one in Brown's own herbarium. "There may be therefore 
Some mistake, bay ve no sedent of Me ga growing » er pira of Australia 
visited b rown. C. arenarium B, n Bot ae 2531, appears to me to 
Tepresent the larger flowered form of this fios whic s hat generally i from ("e 
interior of N. S. Wal ie sellers South ved ec enero belong to the smaller 
form figured Bot. Mart 
. Br. Prod. 997. Very n 
poster, the pn E shore hike 2n lon NT the segme about as 
E erb. jin 946 n 
 aenden Moreton bay, d in Herb. F. Mueller 
ales. Jackson, Backhouse ; Hastings river, ` Beckler; Glendon, 
Leichhardi; Borken and Castlereagh river, Herb. F. Mueller ; Lord Howe's island, 
: g PERS Murray river, Behr; Morunda to the eastern bend of the river, 
F. Mueller. 
The figu 
pelicel Alan “she ried specimens, and seems rather to represent the short pedicellate 
i e 
m of 0.a a; it was not drawn from any authentically Australian spec 
A roor Red t. 408, referred here by Ker, appears also to t the sa 
e fra ary specimens from Burnet, Haly, and Curri- 
variety of C. asia 
willighie, Dalton, seem almost intermediate between C. edunculatum and C. asiaticum. 
e wild specimens in herbaria are, however, so unsatisfactory, and the cultivated e^ 
in Sedi so frequently uncertain as to their origin, that the distinction of species ca 
only be established by studying them in their native country. 
19. EURYCLES, Salisb. 
Perianth deciduous, funnel-shaped, with a slender but usually short 
tube and 6 nearly equa al broad lobes. Stamens 6, inserted at the mouth 
of the tube; filaments united at the base or to above the middle i ina 
free but dilated into lateral n asm s; anthers 2-lobed at the base. 
Ovary 3-celled, with 2 ovules in cell colis dari attached to an 
exile placenta. Style filiform, blame; with a terminal stigma. Fruit 
