672 CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE BOTANICAL MAGAZINE. 



indivisa {Nectarium, Linii.). Ovarium 5-localare : loculis 

 dispermis. Capsula -. septis duplicatis dernium 5-parti- 

 bilis. Brown. 



JRulingia pannosa, capsulis echinatis exsertis, foliis den- 

 tato-serratis acutis planis supra scabris subtus tomen- 

 tosis : inferioribus ovatis subcordatis passimque lobatis ; 

 superioribus oblongo-lanceolatis. Br. prodr. fl. nov.-holl. 

 2 inedit. 



Our friend Mr. Brown, to whom we are indebted for the 

 above generic and specific characters, places this genus 

 in the Natural system in his order of Buttneriacece, which 

 he has defined in the appendix to ' Fhnders's Voyage,' 

 vol. ii, p. 540.^ 



It is nearly related to Conm.ersonia, from which it differs 

 in the number of sterile filaments, or divisions of the necta- 

 rium, in the cells of the ovarium being two-seeded, and in the 

 capsule. Named in memory of John Philip Riiling, author 

 of an essay on the ' Natural Orders,' in which he has pub- 

 lished the ideas of Professor Biittner upon this subject. A 

 greenhouse shrub, native of Port Jackson, in New Holland, 

 where Mr. Brown discovered several other species of the 

 same genus. 



Bot. Mag. 2191 (1820). 



Symphoria racemosa. 

 Pentandria monogynia. 



Germen 4-loculare : loculis 2 polyspermis, sterilibus ; 

 2 monospermis, fertilibus. Bacca coronata. Cor. tubu- 

 losa, brevis, 5-fida, subsequalis. Cal. 5-dentatus. Brown. 

 Lonicerse sp. Linn. 



Symphoria racemosa^ racemo interrupto subterminali, 

 corolla intus barbata. 



Germen ovate, with two or three small bracts applied 

 close to the base. Mr. Brown has observed that it is four- 



' \Ante vol. i, p. 11.] 



