154 



See also the Moonambah, Richmond River (W. Baeuerlen), specimens referred 

 to at p. 238 of Part VIII, but not figured, and foot of Mount Lindsay (W. Forsyth) 

 figured at fig. 16a, b, of Plate 40. 



" Woolly Butt." Juvenile leaves broadish, more or less scabrous, and even 



undulate to glabrous and lanceolate. (An odd leaf as broad as any of Wilson's Downfall; 



see below). Buds brown, rounded, stellate. Fruits pedicellate, but with pedicels 



not long; medium in size, hemispherical, rimmed, valves non-exsert to more or less 



exsert. Bolivia, near Tenterfield (J.H.M.). A similar specimen was referred to as 



follows in Part VIII, p. 238 :— 



" Tenterfield to Sandy Flat (J.H.M.). Fruits very similar to those of E. eugenioides, Sydney, e.g., 

 Concord Park (believed to be typical), hemispherical, and somewhat exserted valves. Buds very com- 

 pressed, almost like capitellata. I figured this (Plate 4, Part I) as E. Muelleriand, and I now put it under 

 E. cvgcnioidcs with doubt. It certainly is a transit form. 



Juvenile foliage (suckers) lanceolate, glabrous, ; small stellate brown buds; fruits 

 hemispherical, slightly pedicellate, more or less. Some a little piperita- of acmenioides 

 like, but very variable. Acacia Creek, Macpherson Range (Forest Guard W. Dunn.) 

 At one time looked upon as a small-fruited from of E. Muelleriana. 



Suckers glabrous, lanceolate. Buds stellate. Fruits very shortly pedicellate, 

 for the most part sessile. Medium sized, rimmed with more or less exsert valves. 

 Cataract Run, near Tenterfield (L. C. Irby). Certainly a transit form between the 

 pedicellate (eugenioides) series and the sessile (Blaxlandi). 



Tree of 20 or 30 feet. Suckers not in the youngest state nearly glabrous ( shining 

 upper surface). Buds clavate, nearly bursting into flower. Fruits somewhat E* 

 pilularis -like, becoming exsert. Pedicels very short or none. Wallangarra (J. L. 

 Boorman). This is another intermediate form related to E. eugenioides and perhaps 

 E. Muelleriana. 



Then we have, suckers broad, nearly orbicular to broadly lanceolate, glabrous; 

 buds small, brown, stellate to clavate, with pointed opercula when bursting into flower 

 (it is very desirable to describe the shape of the buds when they are bursting into flower 

 if possible, as they have a definite shape for that form) ; fruits smallish to medium large, 

 exsert to prominently exsert. Pedicellate to sessile. Wilson's Downfall (R. H. 

 Cambage, Nos. 2,822, 2,826, 2,839). This is another puzzling form, named at different 

 times E. eugenioides and E. capitellata, though not typical. 



Queensland. 

 Buds slightly pedicellate, slightly glaucous; fruits medium, E. pilular is -like. 

 Stanthorpe (J. L. Boorman). Figured at 2a-d, Plate 39, and not distinguishable from the 

 Armidale specimens already referred to. 



Now let us turn to Victoria and South Australia, beginning with Victoria. 



Victoria. 

 Tt. seems to me that the true E. capitellata does not extend to Victoria, and that 

 Mr. Howitt's notes on Gippsland forms, quoted at Part VIII, p. 217, refer to 



