Ill 



611. S. laevigata Benth. 

 Xear Herby (W.V.F.). 



Flowers bluish-purple. In sandy loam. 



Var. hispida Benth. 

 Goody Goody, nine miles from Derby (W.V.F.). 

 Flowers bluish-purple. In sandy soil. 



612. S. aurieulata F. v. M. 



Isdell, C'harnley and Calder Rivers; Swan Point (W.V.F.). 

 Flowers jiurple to white. In sandy loams. 



613. A. hrachystoma R. Br. 



Lennard, Isdell, Charnley and Calder Rivers (W.V.F.). 

 Flowers white. In sandy soils. 



CUCURBITALES. 



CUCURBITACE.E. 



614. Luffa graveolens Roxb. 



Stems twining many yards ; flowers yellow ; fruits striped white 

 and green, ultimately reddish. 



615. Cucumis trigonus Rosb. 



Stems twining many feet ; flowers yellow ; fruits white when 

 ripe. 



616. 2Iukia scabrella Arnott. 



Twining for many feet; leaves usually hastate. 



617. Bryonia laciniosa L. 



WingTah Pass, Xapier Range (W.Y.F.). 



Fruits purple when ripe and of a nauseous taste. 



618. Melothria ]\Iuelleri Benth. 



King and Denham Rivers (TV.Y.F.). 

 In sandy loams. 



CAMPANULATiE. 



GOODENIACE^. 



631. Velleia panduriformis R. Cunn. 



Stems several together, erect or ascending from a thickened 

 woolly stock, 3-5tt. high; radical leaves 4-6in. long, broadly 

 obovate, deeply toothed, stem-leaves or bracts broadly ovate 

 or suborbieular, toothed, to Sin. diameter; calyx about Jin. 

 long; sepals free almost to the base, the upper one broadly 

 ovate, much longer than the others and prominently toothed, 

 the others with ciliate entire margins all acute, green and 

 glabrous witliout, shortly hirsute within; corolla dark- 



