A CLASSIFIED LIST OF THE 
NATIVE SPECIES 
WITH ANNOTATIONS INDICATING THEIR DISTRIBUTION 
WITHIN THE PROVINCE. 
To record localities for each species would add much to the bulk and 
cost of this work, but as it seemed desirable to give some idea of their 
distribution, I have adopted the plan of subdividing the Province into 
12 districts (as set forth in the following schedule and the accompanying 
map), and by the use of monograms to indicate their occurrences therein. 
Two chief floras are recognised :—The Eremian or Desert Flora which 
occupies the arid region of Central Australia and corresponds with the 
“‘salt-bush country” of the pastoralist. The region is approximately 
limited by the rain-fall line of ten inches. 2. The Euronotian Flora which 
is dominant in the more humid parts of temperate Australia, excepting the 
extreme south-west. 
EREMIAN REGION. 
F. North of the Central District, chiefly comprising the basin of the upper 
Finke-river and its tributaries. 
C. Central District. This comprises chiefly the low plains around Lake 
Eyre and is demarked by the rain-fall line of 7 inches in conjunction 
with certain physical features. Its flora is most characteristically 
eremian. 
S. South of District C, extending from Lake Torrens to the Barrier Range; 
it overlaps N and M. 
W. West of Lake Torrens, overlapping C on the north and L on the south. 
M. The plain of the Lower Murray River. It is defined on the west by 
the Adelaide chain and its north-east extension to the Barrier Range. 
EURONOTIAN REGION. 
. The Adelaide District. 
A 
N. The northern agricultural areas, separated from A by a line drawn 
from the head of St. Vincent-gulf to Burra. 
Y. Yorke-Peninsula. 
L. The Port Lincoln district, comprising southern Eyre-peninsula and the 
costal tract extending towards the Head of the Great Bight. 
KX. Kangaroo Island. 
T. South of the Murray Desert embracing the ‘‘90-mile desert ” and the 
Tatiara. 
G. The volcanic area of the south-east corner of the Province or the Mount 
Gambier district. 
