47 



17. Small fruit, with tendency to doming. 17a. Fruit larger, with flat top with tendency to doming. 



17b. Buds all from same tree, Warrah Creek, Liverpool Plains, N.S.W. 

 IS. Very large-fruited, broad- rimmed form, Dapto, N.S.W. 



19. '•' Blackbutt," Hartley Mill, Glen Innes, N.S.W. Small fruit, more pear-shaped than usual, and 

 inserted at this place to show the resemblance to 17, and also to macrorrhynelia forms, e.g., 23, 24, 27. 



D. Domed Fruits tending to E. macrorrhynelia and capitellata, with and without Angled Buds. 



20. "Stringy bark/' Mt. Lofty, near Adelaide, S.A. (often refen-ed to as E. capitellata). 



21. Fruits. 21a. Angled buds (from same tree). Grampians, Victoria. The valves more exserted than 



20; the buds resembling those of capitellata. 



22. Moonan Flat, Upper Hunter River, N.S W. Large fruits, broad rims. 



23. " Red Stringybark," Moona Plains, Walcha, New England, N.S.W. Transit to macrorrhyncha (close 

 to var. orachycorys). 23a. Mount Seaview, Upper Hastings River. Practically identical with 23. 



24. Fruits. 24a. Larger fruits. 24b. Angled buds (all from same tree), with very broad rims, and the 

 valves less prominent than macrorrhyneha ; near to capitellata. The angled buds nearer to 

 capitellata. Bluff River, near Tenterfield. 



25. Flat-topped fruits. 25a. Angled buds. 25b. Pointed buds (all from same tree). On the whole 

 tending to capitellata. Bluff River, near Tenterfield. 



26. Rounded buds. From same locality as No. 25 and from similar trees. The same tree often displays 

 much variation as regards the buds. 



. Stanthorpe, Queensland. Fruits of macrorrhyncha, var. orachycorys, Bentham. It will be observed 

 that the transit from typical pilularis to this form is quite gradual. 



Sydney : William Applej,'ate Gullick, Government Printer.— 1903. 



