47 



For E. tessdlaris, see Plate 156, Part XXXVIII. The juvenile leaves are narrow, 

 the flower buds clavate and decurved. The chief similarity is in the fruits, which 

 much resemble each other in size and outline, but they are otherwise very different. 

 One can readily crush the fruits of E. tessellaris between the fingers, as their walls arc 

 papery like those of E. clavigera and its allies; those of E. tracliyphloia are much more 

 strongly built. The trees are very dissimilar in appearance, E. tessellaris having tessel- 

 lated bark (and smooth upwards) as its name denotes, while that of E. irachypJiloiahas 

 a flaky fibrous bark throughout, with a yellowish cast. 



4. With E. dichromophloia F.v.M. 



Its real systematic place should be next to E. dichromojiMoia, from which it can be distinguished in 

 rougher bark, in thinner less elongated leaves of a darker green above, and dull paleness beneath (therefore 

 not of equal colour on both sides), with recurved edge, in the want of stomata on the upper page of the 

 leaves, in the calyces of less polished smoothness, in smaller fruits with perhaps never or only rarely four 

 valves, and in the absence of any appendage to the fertile seeds. (" Eucalyptographia," under 

 E. tracliyphloia.) 



For E. dichromophlcia, see Plate 165, Part XL. Its affinity to E. tracliyphloia is 

 not as close as Mueller thought it was. E. dichromophloia has a red timber, and a 

 reddish, flaky bark. The juvenile foUage of E. dichromophloia is described at Part 

 XLI, p. 3. 



The affiiiity of E. trachyphloia is with the Yellow Barks. E. eximia, peltata, 

 Waisoniana, and trachyphloia are Yellow-barks ; all have barks fibrous-flaky and more 

 or less yellow, and timbers palish in contrast to reddish, such as that of E. corymbosa. 

 These Yellow-barks are more stringy than those of the generality of those of the Blood- 

 woods (which are more flaky) ; in this respect they display affinity to the Peppermints 

 and even to the Stringybarks. The following table shows some of the characters 

 contrasted, so far as it is possible to contrast species so closely related : — ■ 



Juvenile leaves 



cximi '. 



pd'.a'a. 



Watsoniana. 



trachyphloia. 



Peltate 



Peltate 



Unknown 



Peltate, more hirsute 











than the others. 



Mature leaves 



Tendency to large 

 size. 



Medium size 



Medium size 



Tendency to small 

 size. 



Buds 



No joedicels ; ' me- 



Hardly any pedicels; 



Short pedicels ; rather 



Distinct and even 





dium size ; coni- 



smaller than E. 



■large ; nearly flat 



moderately long 





cal opercula. 



eximia ; conical 

 opercula. 



opercula. 



pedicels ; small ; 

 sub-conical oper- 

 cula. 



Fruits 



Medium size ; ovoid, 



Small, ovoid 



Rather large ; dis- 



Small, slightly urceo- 





less rarely urceo- 





tinctly urceolate. 



late. 





late. 









