220 



10. E. linearis Dehn. 

 Linear, the most linear of all species, say 5 cm. long, sessile, glabrous, thin. 



211. E. longicornis F.v.M. 



Add to Part XXXIX, p. 273 : Sessile or nearly so, slightly glaucous, thickish, 

 ovate to oblong and orbicular (say 5 cm. in diameter) markedly triplinerved. 



107. E. longifolia Link and Otto. 



Petiolate, thin, sometimes slightly paler coloured on the lower side, but usually 

 the same colour on both sides; ovate to broadly ovate or nearly rhomboid. A common 

 measurement is 5 by 7 cm. (up to 9 by 6 cm.). 



183. E. macrandra F.v.M. 



I have not seen them quite in the earliest stage, petiolate, the base tapering 

 to the petiole, ovate to broadly lanceolate, bright green on both sides, the intramargina 

 vein at a considerable distance from the edge, the secondary veins at an angle of 40 to 

 50 degrees from the midrib, greater than those figures at 3a, and 5a, Plate 150. 



239. E. maculata Hook. 



Shortly petiolate, thin, paler on the underside, ovate to orbicular, scabrous, 

 owing to the presence of stellate hairs on the leaves and glandular hairs on the rachis; 

 peltate in the earliest stage, venation conspicuous. Figs, la, 16, Plate 178. 



99. E. Maideni F.v.M. 

 " Young shoots quadrangular, their leaves broadly cordate, with a small pointed 

 apex, opposite, and of a whitish hue underneath (only, J.H.M.), petioles almost 

 absent." (Original description.) Thin, plentifully dotted, the intramargjnal vein 

 distant from the edge, the secondary veins spreading from the base, and roughly at an 

 angle of 50 to 60 degrees from the midrib. Figs. 3 and 4, Plate 79. 



53. E. melanophloia F.v.M. 



Glaucous (as is the tree all over), moderately thick, ovate to nearly orbicular, 

 the base cordate, the apex emarginate, the nodes distant. The intramarginal veins 

 distant from the edge, the secondary veins distinct, spreading at an angle with the 

 midrib of about 45 to 55 degrees. They shade off, towards the edge, into fine, reticulate 

 veins. Figs, la, lb, lc, Plate 54, and fig. 2a, Plate 240, 



