No. 
48, 
49, 
59. 
PROCEEDINGS OF SECTION D. 
Fruit much contracted at the orifice, nearly globular 
Fruits but slightly or not at all contracted ... oe 
Fruits nearly 1 inch in diameter, 2. buprestiwm. 
Fruits about } inch in diameter, Z. piperita. 
(Some specimens from near Port Jackson have almost urceo- 
late fruits, but seem gradually to pass into the other 
form.) 
. Fruits nearly 1 inch in diameter, 2. Planchoniana. 
Fruits rarely exceeding 3 inch... 
. Peduncles mostly recurved 
Peduncles erect... 
Operculum conical, #. decurva. 
Operculum hemispherical, 2. Cooperiana. 
. Base of the calyx as well as of the operculum abruptly 
dilated into a furrowed ring, /. torquata. 
Base of calyx and operculum without these dilatations 
Peduncles short and thick, usually much flattened, 
EF. incrassata. 
(An extremely variable species ; E. dumosa seems to pass 
into it by almost imperceptible degrees, although it can 
generally be distinguished by smaller flowers and fruits 
and less flattened peduncles. E. grossa, which is the same 
as E. pachypoda, appears to be algo a variety with blunt, 
but rather long, operculum. See also No. 1)8, E. 
goniantha. ) 
Peduncles nearly terete, mostly slender 
. Calyx angular 
Calyx terete 
. Fruit about } inch long, ZH. gracilis. 
Fruit about 3 inch long, L. ochrophloia. 
(Perhaps a variety of the above). 
. Calyx and operculum granular—rough 
Calyx and operculum smooth ... 
. Large tree, with fibrous bark ; leaves mostly very 
inequilateral, /. obliqua. 
(Sometimes cultivated under the name of E. fissilis.) 
Shrubs or small trees with smooth bark 
Leaves rather small, nearly straight, 2. stricta. 
(This is the typical E. stricta of Sieber, well described in 
Mueller’s Eucalyptographia, with reniform anthers. 
Bentham, in Flora Austr. III, 217, apparently had a 
mixture of two species before him, describing the fruit of 
E. stricta, but the anthers of another species. 
No. 
49 
50 
51 
52 
53 
54 
