374 PROCEEDINGS OF SECTION D. 
both western localities; and Stony Creek, County 
of Vernon, New England, a northern locality. Most of 
our New South Wales trees have fruits smaller than the 
Tasmanian ones. 
L.—ZH#. Maiden, F.v.M. 
I have been favoured with an excellent series of specimens 
from Mr. Rodway, and they match 2. Maideni, F.v.M., 
from a type locality (Colombo, Lyttleton, N.S.W.) exactly. 
Whether #. Maideni is an extreme form of 7. globulus or 
not is worthy of further examination, and Mr. Rodway’s 
specimens and observations (imfra) are worthy of note in 
connection with any experiments to reproduce certain 
species from cultivation of existing forms. 
My present view is that #. Maiden is as near midway 
as can be between Z. globulus and #. goniocalyx, and there- 
fore I am unable to reduce it to a form of either. 
If my determination is correct, and I have no doubt 
about it in my own mind, then another species is added to 
the flora of Tasmania. 
Mr. Rodway is, however, of opinion, that his specimens 
belong to #. viminalis, and he proposes to call the variety 
macrocarpa, and the remarks of such an experienced ob- 
server require the most careful attention. I am of 
opinion that the sucker-leaves are of #. Maideni, rather 
than of #. viminalis. The locality is Domain, Hobart, and 
Mount Nelson Range, and the plant is worthy of further 
enquiry. 
“ Habit and leaves as in typical viminalis to rather more 
erect, and leaves slightly larger. Mature bud 1:5 em. 
long by 8 mm. Operculum sub-hemispheric to conical, 
smooth. Fruit of the type only 1:2 cm. diameter, often 
obscurely 2-ribbed. 
“This form I have only found in plantations of #. 
viminalis growing with ZL. globulus. I take it to be a 
hybrid. Of six seedlings grown from seeds of the same 
tree, four were closely approximating #. vzmnnalis, one 
£. globulus, and the sixth intermediate.”’ 
M.—/. cordata, Labill. 
Up till quite recently this species was believed to be 
endemic to Tasmania, but Deane and Maiden (Proc. Linn. 
Soc. N.S.W., 1901) have shown that it also occurs in New 
South Wales. It is, in fact, the #. pulvigera of A. Cunn.’s 
Journal, referred to #. pulverwenta, Sims, in B. Fl. in, 
