NOTES AND EXHIBITS. 425 



he said, beyond doubt, as it had been determined by Lord 

 Walsingham; (2) A remarkable Coccus gall, probably repre- 

 senting a new genus of Brachyscelidse, found on Eucalyptus 

 rostratus at Parramatta, enclosing a female Coccus more than 

 an inch in length. 



Mr. OlliflP added that he would be greatly obliged to any 

 Members of the Society who would forward to him any galls 

 which they might observe on Eucalypts, as he was at present 

 working at their economy, with the view of preparing a memoir 

 on the subject for publication in our Proceedings. 



Mr. Fletcher exhibited the complete collection of plants 

 obtained by Mr. Froggatt in the neighbourhood of Derby, N.W. 

 Australia, comprising representatives of fifty natural orders, and 

 about 180 species, the orders most largely represented being 

 Amarantacese (10 species), Leguminosse (about 20 species), Com- 

 positse (9 species), and Gramineae (about 18 species). The whole 

 collection, which has been examined by Baron von Mueller, has 

 been presented to the Society's herbarium by the Hon. W. Macleay. 



Also, specimens of eighteen species of plants from the Cobar 

 district, collected and presented to the Society by Eev. J. Milne 

 Curran, P.G.S., among which are a number recorded from N.S.W. 

 for the first time by Baron von Mueller {see Proc. Roy. Soc. of 

 Victoria for 1887), from specimens sent him by Mr. Curran. 



