103 



These specimens were probably collected by Wilhelmi; I have seen specimens 

 collected by him at this place, also from localities "coast opposite Tumby Island" 

 and "Galway." 



" E. costata, 13ehr et Miiller, Marble Ranges, Nov. Holl. Austr. Frutex 

 10-12'. Leg. Dr. Ferd. Miiller, Herbar. W. Sonder." Herb. Cant, ex Herb. Lindl. 



12. E. linopoda, R.Br. 



From Memory Cove. Collected by Robert Brown. 



13. E. rugosa, R.Br. 



Collected by R. Brown at " Bay hi, 1802." 



11. E. sulcata, Tausch. 



Coll. Ferd. Bauer in herb. Bauer, ex herb. Vindob. is E. incrassata, Labill. 



15. E. paehyphylla, A. Cunn. non. F.v.M. 



Eucalyptus pachyphrjllus, Cunningh.* MSS. " Grand arbrisscau croissant par 

 les bateaux. Le passage de Roi George (Cunningbam)." No. 10, D'Urville. 

 Evidently a specimen presented by Allan Cunningham. In flower and early fruit. 

 It is E. incrassata, var. angulosa. 



(e) Var. goniantha, var. nov. 



16. E. goniantha, Turczaninow. 



Eucalyptus goniantha ramis teretibus ; foliis lanccolatis utrinque attenuatis viridibus opacis 

 impunctatis • umbellis axillaribus 6-8 floris in paniculas collectis ; pedunculis deflexis carnplanatis ; 

 pedicellis, cupulis operculisque angulatis rugosis ; pedicellis clavatis operculisque conicis obtusis cupulara 

 duplo excedentibus, latitudine sequalibus.. No^a Hollandia, Drum., n. 71. (Turcz. in Bull. Soc. Nat. 

 JIo.sc. xx [1847], pt, 1, p. 163.) 



Discussing the affinity of E. goniantha and E. incrassata, Mueller says : — 



E. goniantha comes still nearer (than E. oleosa) to E. incrassata, but the leaves are somewhat more 

 distinctly sickle-shaped, not so shining nor of such even smoothness, but slightly reticulated on their 

 surfaces, the tube of the calyx is comparatively still more deeply furrowed, the attenuated upper portion of 

 the lid broader and more blunt, while the anthers seem invariably heartshaped-globular, so far as this 

 plant, of which we have as yet no ripe fruit, is known. (Eucalyptographia under E. incrassata.) 



I am not aware that fruits of this form have been described ; I have not seen 

 them. But this form (from buds and flowers) is apparently so closely allied to var. 

 angulosa (and particularly to certain Victorian specimens, that I scarcely hesitate to 

 describe it as a new variety of E. incrassata. The operculum is bluntish and the 

 ribs of the buds are very pronounced. 



s Probably identical with " E. paehyphylla,, Cunn. MSS., from King George's Sound (No. 231 of 4th voyage)." 

 Footnote, Journ. Linn. Soc. iii, 98. 



