Australian Plants. 4] 
On sandridges along the Murray River towards the junction 
of the Murrumbidgee. 
To the same genus belongs Zichya Latrobeana of Meisner, 
Gin Lehmann plant. Preiss. I, p. 94.) 
CUNONIACEAR. 
23. Bauera sessiliflora. 
Hirsute; leaves lanceolate or subovate, generally entire; 
flowers axillary and terminal, sessile, pseudo-verticillate; 
calyces to the middle eight-cleft, with subulate-lanceolate 
or linear segments and with a slightly ribbed obconico- 
cylindrical tube; petals purple; stamens about twelve; 
anthers oblong-ovate, emarginate, black. 
On the rocky subalpine summit of Mount William, and 
thence descending along the rivulets into the-valleys. 
Flowers larger and of a much deeper colour than in Bauera 
Billardieri. 
CELASTRINEZ. 
24. Celastrus Australis. 
(Harvey & Mueller.) 
Climbing; branches warted; leaves glabrous, lanceolate, 
acuminate, crenate or repand-serrated, their teeth mucronu- 
late; panicles terminal; capsules three-valved, with one- or 
two-seeded cells. 
On the Snowy and Buchan Rivers, not only in rich humid 
ground, but also on rocks. 
The first Australian species described of the genus, resem- 
bling C. paniculatus and C. dependens from East India. 
LYTHRACE. 
25. Ammannia Australasica. 
Annual, glabrous; stem erect, simple or branched, square; 
leaves ovate- or linear-oblong, blunt, with a dilated base 
clasping; cymes axillary, on very short peduncles, or rarely 
the flowers solitary in the axils; calyces cupshaped, with four 
very short acute teeth and four indistinct ones alternating 
with them; petals four, nearly lanceolate, flavescent, very 
soon falling off; stamens four; capsule globose, extremely 
thin, one-celled. 
