Mamnea.] flora of Tasmania. 
tomentosis et pilosis, Mis oblongo- v. elliptico-lanccolatis subtus albo- v. rufo-tomentosis, cymis tcrminalibu*. 
multifloris laxis densisve, calycibus sericeo-villosis, stylo trifido.— -Sit I. I 
Hab. Hinders' Island, in Bass' Straits, U/om. 
Distrib. New South Wales. 
Very similar indeed to P. elliptica, but the branchlets, cyme?, mid leaves beneath are covered more or less 
with long soft hairs, and the cymes are generally more lax, and smaller. The flowers appear to be the sum. 
except that the calyx is villous. Ghana's specimens are indifferent, and in fruit only; the loaves are broader, 
• blunter, and the tomentum beneath more appressed and whiter than in Australian specimens, b 
were intermediate between P. elliptica and P. ferrmjinea. 
4. Pomaderris apetala (Lab. Nov. Holl. i. 52. t. 87) ; frutex erectus, ramulis foliisque junioribus 
dense furfuraceo-lanatis v. appresse tomentosis, foliis ovato-lanceolatis oblongisvo pctiolatis acutis imgn- 
lariter dentatis basi rotundatis superne glabris scabridis vol rugosis subtus dense lanatis nervis prominulis, 
cymis paniculatis foliosis lanatis, calycibus stellato-pubesccntilms, pi talis 0, stvhs supra medium distinctis. 
—Hook. Journ. Bot. i. 256, ii. 420. P. aspcra, Sicb. PL Exsicc. 211; DC. Prvdr. I. c. 
Var. a; foliis lanceolatis superne glabris subtus ramulisque dense appresse albo-tomcnt« 
126.) 
"Var. /9; foliis oblongis v. oblongo-lanceolatis superne glabris rugosisve subtus rufo-tomentosis ramu- 
lisque floccosis. (Gunn, 1040.) 
Var. 7; foliis oblongis obtusis supra scabridis rugosisque, subtus ramulisque albo- v. nil • 
{Gunn, 1039.) 
Hab. Abundant throughout the Island. Var. a. Everywhere. Var. /?. On the banks of I 
above Hobarton. Var. 7. North Coast.— (Fl. Oct. to Dec.) («. v.) 
Distrib. New South Wales and South-eastern Australia. 
An extremely common and variable Arab, 3-6 feet high, more or less covered on the branches, petioles, 
under surface of the leaves, and cymes with an appressed or rarely floccose, dense, white or rufous tomentum, 
mixed with stellate hairs. — Leaves petiolate, varying from oblong to lanceolate-ovate, always round 
acnte, coriaceous, 2-5 inches long, toothed or nearly entire; upper surface glabrous and smooth 
scabrid and rugose with impressed nerve-, that , nt on the under suri'a< ■ 
merous, many-flowered, abundant towards the terminations of the branchlets, and t j 
panicle, its branches and branchlets densely covered with white or buif-coloured furfuraceous orappi 
turn. Calyx-tube obconic, tomentose, and covered with stellate hairs, or rarely nearlj _: 
Petals none. Stamens exserted. Anthers oblong. Style rather short, divided above the middle int 
spreading stigmata, woolly at the base. Fruit small, obconic, half sunk in the pevaisfa nt lower half of the calyx- 
tube. Cocci white, crustaceous, as in P. elliptica, but hardly acute. Seed lenticular, 009 
5. Pomaderris racemosa (Hook. Journ. Bot. 250); apetala, Idas parfia (f-pollicaribus) petiolatis 
ovato-oblongis utrinque rotundatis inferne ramulisque ferrugineo- v. all 
cymis parvis axillaribus lateralibus 
Hab. Launceston? Lawrence, Gunn. 
Apparently a small shrub, of whose habit and locality I hare no particulars.— ifr- 
covered with rufous or white tomentum 
at both ends, coriaceous, entire or toothed, with a deep central channel, and the lateral nerves marked by parallel 
depressed lines, glabrous above, beneath and along the margins tomentose or furfuraceous (as are the branches). 
Stipule* subulate. Cymes small, axillary, ten- to twenty-flowered, when in flower scarcely longer than the haves, 
leafless ; peduncle elongated after flowering. Calyx-tube obconic, lobes spreading. Petals none. Stat 
