Flora of Australia, 369 



Brazenia Schrkberi, Gmel. (Nymphncaceae). " Water Shield." 



Syst. 853 (B. purpurea, Casp. Journ. Sc. Acad. List IV., 

 1873-4.) 



Callistemon linearis, D.C. (Myrtaceae). 



As no Victorian specimens of tliis species are known it must 

 be deleted from the Victorian Flora. 



Callistemon rugulosus, D.C. (1829). (Myrtaceae). 

 This name replaces that of C. coccineus, F. v. M., 1859. 



Callistemon Sieberi, D.C. (1828). 



The question has arisen as to whether C. pithyoides, Miquel, is 

 not a form of the same species. Ihe two plants have, however, a 

 very different external '' facies,'' and the latter has hairs on the 

 stem and young leaves, more scattered fruits, narrower leaves 

 with a difiterent internal structurd. Hence both species must 

 stand. 



Calochilus Holtzei, F. v. M. (Orchidaceae). 



Near Darwin, Nth. Australia, M. Holtze. 1892. 



This plant is recorded in the Victorian Naturalist, March, 1892, 

 and was inadvertently omitted from the Flora of the Northern 

 Territory. 



Caltiia intuoloba, F. v. M., and Caltha Novae Zealandiae, 

 Hook. (Ranunculaceae). 



Mueller apparently included under the former species the latter 

 one also. Both names stand as valid species. C. introloba has 

 white flowers which are larger than the yellow flowers of C. Novae 

 Zealandicae. Hill (Annals of Botany, 1918, p. 421) distin- 

 guishes the former species by the leaf appendages being folded at 

 an angle of io^C to the petiole, and in the latter being folded at 

 right angles to the petiole. 



Capparis AflTCriELLir, Liiid. (Capparidene). "Desert Caper.' 



This name has been vai-iously spelt with one or two terminal 

 i's. In the original description in Mitchell's Expedition it is 

 spelt as alx>ve. 



