24 
often springing not far from the ground. The fruits vary in 
size on the same tree, and can sometimes be found scarcely 
larger than those of C. robusta. 
GRAMINEAE. 
Eriochloa punctata, (L.)., Hamilt. Frome River. near 
Marree (Hergott). 
appophorum avenaceum, Lindl. Common at Marree. 
Eragrostis falcata, Gaud. non Benth. (E. Har 
F. v. M.). Berri, Lake Bonney, and other places along T 
Murray; Everard Range (S. À. White). Plate 25, Mes 
accompanies Gaudichaud's description of Æ. falcata, and whic d 
shows the spikelets distinctly pedicellate, rather distant, s: 
not clustered, supports the statement in Diels et enn 
Fragm. . Austr. occ. 76, that the original specimen o 
Gaudichaud’s plant, preserved in the Berlin penso 
belongs to the species described in the Fl. Aust., vii., 649, 
as E. lacunaria, F. v. M. s . 
E. Dielsii, Pilger. (E. falcata, Benth. non Gaud.). Berri 
and along the Murray; des 
Cockburn) ; Strzelecki Creek (S. A. White); also Broken v 
N.S.W P 
lets more curved. 
. major, Host. Roadside near Berri (C. G. Ravi 
This European grass has already been recorded in depen 
and New South Wales. It is said that cattle will not eat 1 : 
account of the obnoxious smell of the leaves when ire, Ti 
in North America it is known as *'Stinking grass. In 
T : 
- minor is a smaller plant, with a looser panicle, d 
spikelets (14-2 mm. broad), and the leaf-sheath is P 
with tubercles, many of which ca long hairs. a i J 
r 
hyaline inner ones, and a palea. It therefore appears P s 
able that the second outer glume of the sessile spikelet bet 
but is adnate to, and obliterated in the rhachis, as descri 
