13 
Trine PSYCHOTRIEA. 
PSYCHOTRIA, Linn. 
P. Simmondsiana (n. sp.) (After J. H. Simmonds, the enthu- 
yal 
(After 
siastic hon. secretary of the Field Naturalists’ section of the Ro 
Society of Queensland.) A spreading more or less hirsute shrub, 
usually 
one side, soon scarious and deciduous, linear-lanceolate, 4 or 5 
e 
Peduncles slender in the upper axils, 1} to 2 in. long, bearin 
each branch bearing 3 sessile flowers. Calyx-teeth acute; corolla 
pubescent outside, the tube slightly longer than the lobes, lobes about 
1 line long, slightly imbricate with inflexed tips. Stamens 5, about 
half as long as the corolla-lobes, inserted in a ring of short hairs at the 
mouth of the corolla-tube, the filaments shorter than the anthers. 
Style long as the flower, the stigmatic lobes not spreading. 
Hab.: Tambourine Mountain and Mooloolah Scrubs, Field Naturalists. 
Trizz GALIEZ. 
GALIUM, Linn. 
G. Gaudichaudi, DO., Prod. iv. 607; Fi. Austr. iii, 446. 
very variable plant, usually hispid, more rarely glabrous except minute 
asperities. Stems usually numerous, short erect and densely tufted, or 
diffuse and extending to 1 or 2 ft. Leaves almost always 4 in a 
} 
; 
’ 
: 
: 
] 
‘ ort nc Fruit 
quite glabrous and smooth when fully ripe, though often appearing 
Tugose when shrivelled in dried specimens.— Benth. 1.c. 
Hab. : Mowbulan, Bunya Mountains, H. Tryon, Nov. 1890. 
Order COMPOSITZ. 
Trrrz HELIANTHOIDE. 
