301 



E. cordata Labill. 

 I have a note in Pap. and Proc. R.S. Tas., 1918, p. 83, in regard to this species, 

 still specially looked upon as isoblastic, but Mr. L. Rodway tells me that E. cordata 

 at Brown Mountain, Port Arthur, where it is only 3-5 feet high, has upper leaves which 

 are pedunculate and slightly alternate. 



E. ERYTHROCORYS F.V.M. 



With a strong tendency to maintain an opposite character, it proceeds to the 

 alternate character in fully mature leaves as growth proceeds. 



E. ferrtjginea Schauer. 

 With usually sessile, cordate, rusty pubescent leaves. It lias been found with 

 very short petioles (fig. 2a, Plate 159. Part XXXVIII), but not yet alternate. See 

 E. sctosa. 



E. GAMOPHYLLA F.V.M. 



Mueller in " Eucalyptographia " speaks of the " concrescence of leaves by pairs 

 in all stages of growth " in this species, and figures it so, but in Plate 147 and p. 128, 

 Part XXXY. I have shown that it becomes eventually lanceolate and very shortly 

 stalked. In the same Part. XXXV, p. 133, I have suggested that E. argillacea 

 V . V. Fitzgerald may be the petiolate form of E. gamophylla. 



E. Gillii Maiden. • 

 In Plate 07. Part XV. I have depicted petiolate forms as " transit forms 

 E. oleosa to E. Gillii," but I now look upon them as belonging to the latter species. 



E. Kruseana F.v.M. 

 See Part, XLTT. p. 51 . Plato 175. So far as we know at presents petiolate leaves 

 have not boon found in this species. 



E. MACROCARPA Hook. 



Is no longer isoblastic. The lower leaves are alternate as in E. cordata. 

 Further observations are desired by local botanists. See Jonm. Roy. Boo. N.8.W., 

 liii, 70, and Hi. 506. 



E. MELANOPHLOIA F.V.M. 



See Part XII. p. 71. 



E. parvifolia Cambage. 

 The leaves later become all lanceolate or linear-lanceolate, mostly opposite, or 

 begin to be alternate. See Part XXV. 



E. Preissiana Schauer. 

 See Oldfield's remarks just quoted. 



E. pruinosa Schauer. 

 See Part XII with Plate 54. See also Part XLII, p. 54, where I speak of 

 seedlings with petiolate (pedicellate by misprint) young leaves. The subject is one 

 for inquiry. 



