900 LXVII. GOODENOVIE-E. [Goodenia. 



12. G> calcarata (spurred), F. v. M. Fraym. vi. 14 ; Benth. Fl. Austr. 

 iv. 69. An erect, rather stout, glabrous, and often glaucous annual of ^ to 1ft., 

 the stem very angular. Leaves deeply pinnatifid, with ovate-oblong or lanceo- 

 late, deeply-toothed segments, the terminal one sometimes large and the others 

 small or all more nearly of a size, the upper floral-leaves reduced to small bracts. 

 Peduncles solitary in the axils, forming a terminal raceme. Bracteoles noneor 

 very minute under the flowers. The hollow protuberance of the adnate part of 

 the calyx and corolla produced into a small spur. Capsule ovate, 4 to 5 lines 

 long. Seeds of G. grandiJJora. — Picrophyta calcarata, F. v. M. in Linnsea, 

 XXV. 422. 



Eab.: Southern inland localities. 



13. G. grandiflora (large-flowered), Sims. Bot. Mag. t. 890; Benth. Fl. 

 Austr. iv. 69. Herbaceous, erect, rather stout, more or less glandular-pubescent 

 attaining sometimes 8 or 4ft. Leaves petiolate, from broadly ovate to ovate- 

 lanceolate, truncate or cordate at the base, toothed, often above 2in. long, with 

 or without the addition of a few small segments along the petiole. Peduncles 

 axillary, shorter than the leaves, 1 -flowered, without any or with very minute 

 bracteoles at the base, solitary or the lower ones sometimes 2 or 3 together on a 

 very short, common peduncle. Flowers large, yellow, more or Jess streaked with 

 purple. Calyx-lobes linear-lanceolate. Corolla glabrous or slightly pubescent 

 outside, usually about lin. long< but sometimes large, the 2 upper lobes more 

 deeply separated, the adnate part of the tube with a hollow protuberance, some- 

 times scarcely conspicuous, sometimes very prominent and teaching to the base 

 of the calyx. Dissepiment of the ovary reaching far above the middle ; ovules 

 in 2 rows in each cell. Capsule ovoid-oblong; sometimes -Jin. long, biit often 

 smaller. Seeds broad, flat, with a thickish margin, not winged. — R. Br. Prod. 

 576 ; DC. Prod. vii. 614 ; Bonpl. Jard. Malm. t. 6 ; Bot. Reg. 1845 t. 29 ; De 

 Vr. Gooden. 143 ; F. v. M. Fragm. i. 204 ; G. appendiculata, Jacq. Fragm. t. 92. 



Hab.: Broadsound, R. Brown; Wide Bay, Bidicill ; Burnett and Burdekin Eivers, F. v. 

 Mueller; IXockharriT^ton, Dallachy and othe7s ; Taylor's Range. 



Var. mollis. G. mollis, E. Br. Prod. 577; DC. Prod. vii. 513; De Vr. Gooden. 151, is * 

 variety, or, perhaps, a stiite of the plant, with rather shorter capsules, and no small leaf- 

 segments along the petiole. To this form belong many, but nut all, cf the Queensland 

 specimens. 



14. Gr. Chambersii (after James Chambers), 1< . v. M. Fragm. i. 204; Benth. 

 Fl, Austr. iv. 70. A shrub or undershrub, softly but minutely glandular- 

 pubescent, very closely allied to G. grandiflora, and, judging from the frag- 

 mentary specimens preserved, perhaps a variety. Leaves smaller on shorter 

 petioles, orbicular, coarsely toothed,' f to fin. diameter in our specimens, and 

 without accessory segments. Flowers rather smaller than in G. grandiflora, the 

 lobes rather narrower, and the upper ones less deeply separated than in that 

 species, but the structure otherwise the same, and the saccate protuberance 

 prominent. 



Hab.: Lawn Hill on sandstone ridges, Frank Hugh Hann. 



15. G. Strangfordii (after Count de Strangford), F. v. M. Fragm. vi. 11. 

 t. 52 ; Benth. Fl. Austr. iv. 70. A perennial, simple or branching, and 

 almost, woody at the base, more or less pubescent or almost silky, with a little 

 wool in the axils of the leaves, the stems erect, leafy, under 1ft. high. Leaves 

 rather crowded, lanceolate, entire, 8 to 4in. long, narrowed into a petiole. 

 Peduncles slender, shorter than the leaves, 1 -flowered, without bracteoles or rarely 

 2 linear bracteoles on the lower ones as represented in the plate, the flower 

 readily disarticulating from the peduncle as in most of the ebracteolate species. 



