414 



Emarginate and Mucronate. 

 E. affinis (slightly). E. decipiens. 



E. aggregala. 

 E. buprestium. 

 E. Campaspe. 



E. acacia; jormis. 



E. Baileyana. 



E. Benthami (sometimes) 



E. Cambageana. 



E. drepanophylla. 



E. ferruginea. 



E. Foelscheana. 



E. globidus (often). 



E. Hillii. 



E. Houseana. 



E. affinis. 

 E. aspera. 



Mucronate. 



In E. ietraptera the midrib is continued 

 5 mm. beyond the leaf, forming a rigid, 

 sharp mucro, unusual in Eucalypts. 



Blunt or rounded. 



E. latifolia. 



E. megacarpa. 



E. microtlieca. 



E. Naudiniana. 



E. nitens. 



E. Spenceriana (not markedly). 



E. Stuartiana. 



E. viminalis (frequently). 



E. W ebsteriana. 



Obtuse. 



E. Blakelyi. 

 E. peltata. 



Hooked. 



(Usually most obvious in rigid and succulent, narrow leaves.) 



E. apiculata. 

 E. coccifera. 

 E. coriacea. 



Apiculate 



E. Moorei. 



E. stellulata and many others. 



E. cinerea. 



E. corymbosa. 



E. Gillii (bluntly apiculate). 



E. pyropliora (slightly). 

 E. umbra. 



Margins. 



It is not easy to classify leaves according to their margins; the following lists 

 are a mere introduction to the subject. The vast majority of species have unindented 

 (entire) margins, with the blades in one plane. 



Under margin incurved slightly. 



E. capitellata. E. trachyphloia. 



E. stricta. 



