80 
lines long; anthers somewhat shorter, but the terminal membrane 
held in the little point of the corona scale at its back. P llen masses 
oblong» glossy. Stigma minutely 2-lobed. Fruit not seen. 
ab.: K 
amerunga, ZL. Cowley. 
Order CONVOLVULACEZ. 
Trrrz CONVOLVULEZ. 
ERYCIBE, Roxb. 
= xcs heen Roxb. tbe Austr. iv. 411.; var. coccinea, 
Native name, “ Nangbro.” Bentham le. says berry in the 
Indian specimens ovoid, above 4} in. long, not seen in the Australian 
ones. De Candolle Prod. ix. 464. The berry is said to be black, the 
size of a small cherry. In Brandis’s Florist Flora, p. 344, the berry 
is also said to be black. The colour of berry is very seldom recorded 
IPOMAEA, Linn. 
Serres SpEcrosm. é | 
J. Muelleri, Benth. Fl. Austr. iv. 423. A glabrous, rather 
slender twiner. Leaves on rather long petioles, very broadly cordate- 
ovate, obtuse, with rounded basal auricles, entire, 1 to 2 ™ ong. 
n 
the calyx. Seeds villous, nearly allied to I. sepiaria, but the flowers 
Hab.: Queensland, F. v. M. 
Order SOLANACEZ. 
SOLANUM, Linn. 
S. macoorai (n. sp.) Aboriginal name for South Peak of ae cok 
Ker Range. A shrub of stravgeli i ining f 5 to 
iS : geling habit, attaining trom ‘ 
in height, the young shoots prepa appearing glabrous, but with the 
id oO se co ; i 
about 2in.; the margins repandly lobed. No flowers see? t 
solitary, on a peduncle of about 1 in., globular, yellow, abou plunt 
t base of fruit) with 
prominent ribs, lobes 2 or 8 lines long with recurved points: 
. 
: 
: 
the seeds 
