BY J. H. MAIDKN. G7 



LEGUMINOSiE. 



Bossicea buxifulia A. Cunn. 



microphylla Sm. 

 Hovea linearis R.Br. 



longifolia R.Br. A beautiful and variable species. 

 Indigo/era australis Willd. The normal form. 



australis Willd., var. signata. 

 Swainsona coronillifolia Salisb. 

 Acacia triptera Benth. Very common. 



lanigera A. Cunn. With slender stems up to 10 feet. 

 juniperina Willd. 



var. Brownei. Not prostrate, leaves sparse; flowers 

 yellow. A spreading bush of 4 feet. 

 penninervis Sieb. Tall slender shrubs. 

 neriifolia A. Cunn. The Wattle of Howell. Up to 



12 or 15 feet, very bushy, glaucous when young 



and with pruinose bark; very bushy and graceful, 



" Bastard Myall," not a bad name. 

 linifolia Willd., var. prominens. 

 decora Reichb. 



] implexa. Not in flower; tall shrubs and small trees. 

 doratoxylon A. Cunn., var. ovata Maiden and Betche. 



(See these Proceedings, 1905, p. 362.) 

 spectabilis A. Cunn. Timber white all through; no 



figure; diameter 3 inches. With more spindly and 



coarser leaves than at Warialda. A different race. 



Bark pruinose up to 10 ft. The habit of the local 



specimens of A. spectabilis much the same as leptoclada 



but its stems are glaucous. 

 spectabilis A. Cunn., var. Sttoartii Benth. 

 leptoclada A. Cunn. Also a specimen showing stem- 



fasciation — a phenomenon not common in the genus. 



An erect species; with long, slender stems up to 12 



feet; trunks smooth, yellow, rarely exceeding 1 inch. 



A soft, beautiful species. The most local species, 



but there are several acres of it. 



