320 



APPENDIX II. 







Climbing shrub .... Clematis. 



Male flower in 



catkins . 



Tropins. 



Parasitical shrub .... Tupeia. 



Herbs. 









Flowers on a fleshy recep- 





Inodorous tree .... Hedyearya. 







Matosternma. 



Opposite-leaved herb . . Ascarina. 



Flowers in small 2-4- 





** Leaves alternate. 



leaved involucres . 



Parietaria. 



§ Compound, 3-5-nate . . . Rubus. 



II. Calyx superior. 







§§ Simple. Anthers with valves Tetranthera. 



* Leaves opposite . 





Coprosma. 



Shrubs or trees. 



** Leaves whorled . 





Myriophyllum 



Stamens opposite valvate 



*** Leaves alternate. 









Flowers umbellate. 



Herbs 



Umbelliferm . 



Stamens opposite imbri- 



Flowers umbellate. 



Shrubs 



Araliacem. 



cate petals .... Suttonia, 



**** Leaves none . 





Exocarpus. 



Stamens alternate with 



B. Monocotyledones. 







valvate petals . . . Pittosporum. 



Perianth 6-parted . 





Astelia. 



Petals 0. Stamens 5 or 



Flowers in catkins . 





Leptocarpus. 





' Flowers bracteate . 





Calorop&us, 



APPENDIX II. 



CATALOGUE OE EUROPEAN AND OTHER PLANTS INTRODUCED INTO AND 

 NOW NATURALIZED IN NEW ZEALAND. 



The following Catalogue has been suggested by the fact of there existing in many collections, plants which, 

 either from being specified as naturalized, or from other causes, are supposed to be so prevalent, that the 

 unskilled collector would assume their being indigenous to the islands. The numbers of species thus trans- 

 ported (most of them from the antipodes) will be greatly increased with the progress of civilization, and 

 this to a greater extent than in many localities of similar temperature and latitude, because the humid, 

 equable, temperate climate of New Zealand, extending as it does 1100 miles from north to south, offers 

 many facilities for the propagation of species both of warmer and colder climates than its own. This list, 

 however, has no pretensions to completeness, for hitherto the subject to which it refers has not occupied 

 the attention of any colonial botanists, and such alone are competent to work it out, 



NATIVE COUNTBY. 



Fomaria parmfiora, Lam Europe (Britain). 



Nasturtium officinale, Br. (Water-cress.) . Europe (Britain). 



Erysimum officinale, L Europe (Britain). 



Senebiera didyma, DC Temperate South America. (Introduced into many countries.) 



Senebiera pinnatifida, DC. Europe, etc. 



