118 



RANGE. 



It is coniined to Western Australia, and. so far as is laiOTvn at present, to a stnp 

 of coast-land, more or less ascending th? Darling Range, in the south-western portion 

 of the State, on the Perth-Bunbury Railway Line, between Kelniscott 16. andWaroona, 

 70 miles south of Perth. 



" Very clean White Gum, Kelmscott, foot of DarHng Range, 16 n.iles south 

 of Perth." (Dr. J. B. Cleland, No. 4.) Figured at fig. 4a and 4b, Plate 74, of the 

 present work. 



"White Gum," 40 feet high, 12 inches in diameter, near Beenup, S.W. Railway, 

 on the Perth to Bunbury road, 24 miles south of Perth (C. E. Lane-Poole, Xo. 8, 

 November, 1918, fruits only; No. 465, July, 1919, complete material). 



" A White Gum, sandy sciiib land, Serpentine River, W.A." In Herb. Melh., 

 and variously attributed by Mueller (on the label) to E. unchvata and to E. mieranthera* 

 It is a very old specimen, and is figured at fig. 8a, 8&, 8c of Plate 74 of the present work. 

 This and the following three locahties are practically identical. 



" Salmon-white Gum ^v Powder Bark Wandoo. Height to about 40 feet, to 

 3 feet in diametea'. " Near Keysbrook (39 miles south of Perth), near the Belgobin School, 

 on the Perth-Bunbury road. (Mr. Schock, through C. E. Lane-Poole, under the same 

 number, 8, as given to some Beenup specimens. ) 



Tree of 40 feet, 3 feet in diameter. Keysbrook. Perth-Bunbiu'y road (]\Ir. Sphock, 

 per Dr. F. W. Steward, No. 1). 



" Salmon Gum or Powder-bark Wandoo," half a mile south of Seq^entine Rirer 

 on Perth- Bunbury road. (Mr. Schock, per Dr. F. W. Stoward, No. 90. ) 



Sent as " Wandoo,"" Waroona, January, 1903 (Forester J. J. Fitzgerald). Waroona 

 is 70 miles south of Perth, and T could only obtain buds. Referred to at p. 224, Part 

 XVII of the present work. 



AFFINITIES. 



1. With E. redunea Schauer. 

 That officers of the Forest Department of Western Australia should, quite 

 independently, in 1903 and 1918, speak of this as a Wandoo, shows that the general 

 appearance of the tree, its bark and timber, must bear more than a superficial 

 resemblance to the true Wandoo {E. redimm). But comparison of the figures 4 and 8, 

 Plate 74 of this work, which partly depict E. Laiie-Poolei, and Plate 140, which shows 

 E. redunea, shows that the two species are botanically very dissimilar. 



• This is the specimen referred to at Part XX of the present work, bottom of page 308, under E, mieranthera. 

 There is, however, v«ry little affinity between the two species. 



