584 



E. megacarpa. 

 E. perfoliata. 

 E. Preissiana. 

 E. Todtiana. 



Fig 



2/, 



Plate 184. 



35 



9a, &c, 



55 



79. 



(Not figured) 







Fig 



5, 



Plate 



56. 



J> 



2c & 4c, 



55 



178. 



?? 



8c, 





55 



43. 



;5 



26, 





55 



173. 



55 



12 





55 



55. 



55 



36 & 



^j(t-, 



5? 



173. 



(6) Up to 4 cm. 

 i?. collina. 



E. ficifolia, 



E. Forrestiana. 



E. hcematoxylon. 



7. Largest — Up to or exceeding 5 cm. 



E 1 . calophylla. E. ptychocarpa. 



E. macrocarpa. E. piriformis. 



E. miniata. 



Corky Patches. 

 We have corky patches or warts on some fruits, e.g., 

 E. eryihrocorys (?) 

 E. globulus 

 E. grandifolia ... 

 E. leucoxylon ... 

 E maculata 

 E. obtusiflora ... 

 E. peltata 

 E. sideroxylon ... 

 E. Watsoniana 



We may have glandular warts, e.g., E. 

 warted operculum in E. dosophora, Fig. 16, Plate 83. 



For remarks on scurfiness of fruits, see Part XXXIX, p. 243, under E. corymbosa. 



For notes on cork warts on leaves, see Solederer, II, 1133. 



An inquiry into corky patches on the organs will doubtless receive attention 

 some day. 



THE CAPSULE. 



Capsule sometimes free or nearly so. 



Gsertner's (1788) figure of Metrosideros gumifera, tab. xxxiv, fig. 1, which is 

 E. corymbosa, shows the capsule separate from the calyx-tube. It will be figured in 

 due course showing the capsule free. 



In the original description of E. dichromophloia, Mueller says : " Capsule finally 

 coming away from the calyx-tube." 



Bentham (B. Fl. iii. 185, 186(3) says, as regards the genus, " the capsule always 

 adnate to the calyx-tube, although often readily separable from it when quite ripe 

 and dry." 



Mueller (preface to " Eucalyptographia," 1879) similarly says : " Capsular 

 portion of the fruit largely adnate to the calyx-tube, only exceptionally much seceding." 



It is in the Corymbosse that this separation of the capsule from the wall of the 

 oalyx-tube mainly occurs, e.g., I have noted it in E. corymbosa, E. terminalis and 

 E. dichromophloia, but it is usually only observed after some desiccation. 



Maideni, Fig. 126, Plate 80, and also 



