860 Transactions.— Botany. 
broadly lanceolate-acuminate, or ovate-acuminate, narrowed into a broad 
base, sessile, quite entire, densely clothed with white tomentum beneath. 
Flowers in erect terminal panicles sparingly leafy, 4'-8' long; branches 
and involucre glandular or glandular pubescent: heads on short pedicels, 
involucral leaves in one series: ray-florets 12-14, narrow, contorted: dise 
florets about 20, perfect, regular, anthers with short tails. Achenes grooved, 
pappus white, scabrid. 
Hab. Herekopere Island, T. Kirk; South Cape Island. Not observed 
on Stewart Island. 
The main stem of this handsome species is often from 8" to 12” in dia- 
meter, branches distant, usually wide spreading and destitute of leaves 
below, In all stages they are thiekly marked with the scars of fallen 
leaves. In-the recent state the foliage is glossy and coriaceous, but these 
characters disappear in drying. After a continuance of rainy weather the 
tomentum becomes somewhat loose and gives a rugose appearance to the 
lower surface of the leaves. The bracts are always membranous, and those 
at the base of the panicles, which equal the ordinary leaves in size, are 
more or less recurved. Most frequently the panicle is simple, but occasion- 
ally its lower branches are compound ; after flowering, the main axis 
becomes elongaied and the panicle loses much of its original compactness. 
The panicle is always glandular and more or less viscid. 
This fine plant approaches S. huntii of the Chatham Islands in habit, 
cicatricose branches, foliage and leafy inflorescence: but the structure of 
the flower allies it to S. sciadophilus and S. perdicioides, although its rays 
are much longer and the heads much larger. The narrow contorted yellow . 
rays are widely different from the broad compact white rays of S. huntit: 
in this respect the latter resembles S. glastifolius and S. hectori. 
Mr. Charles Traill of Stewart Island received living plants from the 
natives several years ago and has had them under cultivation, but they 
have not yet flowered. I collected the plant on sea-cliffs on Herekopere 
Island and was informed by an intelligent half-easte that he had collected 
iton South Cape Island. It does not appear to be known elsewhere, so 
that it further resembles S. huntii of Pitt Island in being restricted to a 
very limited area. 
New Zealand botanists are specially indebted to Baron von Miieller for 
his excellent account of the vegetation of the Chatham Islands, so that I 
have great pleasure in connecting his name with so striking a plant. 
