SI 



RANGE. 



In the present state of our knowledge it appears to be confined mainly to the 

 coastal districts and southern tablelands of New South Wales. The following are the 

 localities : — Berniagui (W. Hutchinson) ; Mt. Imlay, near Eden. " One of the few 

 Eucalypts found on the summit of the Mount." It reaches to but a small tree on the 

 top, but at the base of the Mount and some distance from it, the trees become normal, 

 or average about 50 feet high (J. L. Boorman, Kangaloon) ; " Stringybark saplings " 

 (J. L. Bruce). Between Eden and Brown Mountain (C. C. Robertson and W. A. W- 

 de Beuzeville). The juvenile leaves are broad and of a very dark green. 



UlawaiTa (Rev. Dr. W. W. Woolls) ; Wingello (J. H. Maiden J. L. Boorman, and 

 A. Murphy) ; Marulan (A. Murphy) ; Berrima (J. H. Maiden, J. L. Boorman, D. W. C. 

 Shiress) ; Cutaway Hill, Mittagong (D. W. C. Shiress and W. F. B.). Co-type ; Mount 

 Colah W.F.B.); Asquith (W.F.B.); Wyee (A. Murphy); Wallsend (J. L. Boorman, 

 and J. W. Froggatt); Booral (A. Rudder); Glen Innes (per Forestry Commission). 



AFFINITIES. 



1. With E. eugentoldes Sieber. 



It appears to be a smaller tree than E. eugenioides, with broader juvenile and 

 adult leaves, the former leaves are also less stellate-hispid in the sucker stage, while 

 the fruits are sessile and usually form small globular masses in contradistinction to the 

 lax fruiting habit of E. eugenioides. 



2. With E. agglomerata Maiden. 



Both species have broad juvenile leaves and conglomerate fruits, but the juvenile 

 leaves of E. globoidea are smaller and more glabrous than those of E. agglomerata, while 

 the fruits are smaller and relatively more uniform than the fruits of the latter species. 

 It is also a much smaller tree than E. agglomerata. The seedlings are also smaller, and 

 slightly more crinkled than those of the latter species. 



