462 



3o. Pedicel usually the same length, but often longer than the fruit calyx-tube- 



]'.. umpli folia. 

 E. Cooperiana. 

 E. crebra. 

 E. Culleni. 



E.dccurra. 



E. drepanophylla. 



E. Drummondii. 



E. erythronema. 



E.falcata. 



E. HUM. 



E. leptopoda. 



Angophoroideee... E. clavigera. 



Renantherai 

 Corvmbosse 



E. acmenioides. 

 E. fidfolia, 



E. hvigicoruis. 



E. longifolia. 



E, Naudiniana. 



E. patellar is. 



E. piriformis var. Kingsmil 



E. Raveretiana. 



E. resinifera. 



E. rostrata. 



E. rudis. 



E. salmonopMoia. 



E. torquata. 



E. grandifolia. 



E. Andrewsi. 



Stellate Buds. 



We sometimes have sessile umbels, where they present a star-shaped appearance. 

 A characteristic example is — 



E. stellulata, fig. lb, Plate 25. 



: e also — 



E. ampUfoUa, fig. 4c, Plate 131, Part XXXI; 



E. Baker i, fig. 5b, Plate 183, Part XLIV; 



E. Mitchdlicma, fig. 52, Plate 192, Part XL VII. 



(c) Receptacle. 



The Peduncle naturally leads us to the Receptacle, but I find that Bentham 



only refers to it once, and Mueller not at all. Under E. Lehmanni Preiss, the former 



(B. Fl. iii. 233) refers to "the receptacle forming a globose mass of \ in. or more 



diameter, in which the calyx-tubes (usually two to three lines diameter) are more or 



■ I Fruits half immersed in the receptacle . . ." 



Turning to Plate lit. at 56, between the articulation and the buds, we find 

 the lower pari of the receptacle. In 5c, under the fruits, we see the receptacle as an 

 irregular mass, in which, as Blntham states the Emits are half immersed. The 

 swelling oi the peduncle and its relation to the receptacle is seen at tip;. 4a. The 

 receptacle and its relation !<> the fruits is, however, besl shown in a longitudinal 

 ,<>n which I shall presenl Lot on ;vs a figure. 



