732 NOTES FROM THE BOTANIC GARDENS, NO. 12, 



BORONIA REPANDA, Il.sp. 



(B. Udifolia J. Gay, var. repanda F.v.M. Herb., these Pro- 

 ceedings, 1904, p. 7 35). 



We are of opinion that this plant should properly be looked 



upon as a distinct species, it being, we think, sufficiently and 



consistently distinct from B. ledifolia, its closest congener so far 



as our knowledge goes at present. It seems to be sufficiently 



described loc. cit. 



PORTULACE^E. 



Portulaca bicolor F.v.M. , var. rosea, n.var. 



Howell (J. L. Boorman; January, 1906). 



A small tuberous-rooted perennial (or annual) growing on 

 moist shallow deposits of soil on rocks amongst mosses and other 

 dwarf plants. In habit it is entirely like the yellow-flowered 

 P. bicolor, with the same characteristic two-coloured leaves, but 

 the colour of the flowers in the new variety is rose-pink, and the 

 number of petals 5 or 6, mostly 6. 



SAPINDAOE.E. 

 *Cupania foveolata F.v.M. (Cupanjopsis foveolata Radlk.).f 



Acacia Creek, Macpherson Range (W. Dunn; April, 1905, in 

 flower: December, 1905, in fruit). 



Recorded in Mueller's " Census of Australian Plants " from 

 Queensland only, and consequently omitted from Moore & Betche's 

 " Handbook of the Flora of New South Wales;" but we find 

 that Mueller's omission from New South Wales was a clerical 

 error. Mueller himself quotes in his 'Fragmenta' (Vol. ix., p.95) 

 the McLeay (Macleay) and Bellinger Rivers, both in New South 

 Wales, as habitats of the tree, besides Queensland localities. 

 The foveolse (domatia; see A. G. Hamilton's paper in these Pro- 

 ceedings for 1896) on the underside of the leaves, from which 



* New for New South Wales. 

 t It is our intention to adopt Radlkofer's names in our forthcoming Census 

 of New South Wales Plants, but we desire to deal with the Family in its 



entirety. 



