2?7 



E. marginata Sm. ' The typical tree-form is confined to the more moist country, 

 and will not be seen any more where the yearly rainfall is below 15 cm., but occasionally 

 one will meet there with shrubby forms. (Dr. Diels.) 



E. melanophloia F.v.M. (S,) 



E. melliodora A. Cunn. This is a precocious flowering species, and when it flowers 

 in a shrubby state the leaves are often large. (S.) See Part XIV, p. 13.5. 



E. Moorei Maiden and Cambage. (S.) 



E. occidentalis Eik.11. (Quoted by Diels.) 



E. perfoliate/, R.Br. See lig. 3a, Plate 180. Part XLIV, showing that it may 

 flower in the juvenile stage. 



E. Planchoniana F.v.M. Flowers atStradbroke Island, Queensland, as a stunted 

 bush of a few feet (C, T. White). 



E. polyanthemos Schauer. Flowering as a shrub of 8 or 10 feet, at Quiedong, 

 near Bombala, New South Wales (W. Baeuerlen, March, 1887). 



E. prcecox Maiden. See Part XXVII, p. 131 (last paragraph but one), and 

 fig. lSe, Plate 112. Inquiry is going forward as to whether the remarks under 

 E. Bosistoana (Nepeanensis) apply here. 



E. pulverulenki Sims. (S.) 



E. piriformis Turcz. (S.) 



E. Raveretiana F.v.M. Flowers when only 10 feet high (Mueller in " Eucalypto- 

 graphia.") 



E. redunca Schauer. (Quoted by Diels.) 

 E. Risdoni Hook. f. (S.) 



E. rostrata Schlecht. Mr. A, D. Hardy draws attention to a case of precocious 

 blooming in this species near Melbourne. (Proc. Roy. Soc. Vict., xxix, (New Ser.). 171). 



E. rubida Deane and Maiden. For figure of this species flowering in juvenile 

 stage at Kangiara, near Bowning, New South Wales, see fig. 4a. Plate 110, Part XXVI. 



E. setosa Schauer. See Plate 158, Part XXXVIII. 



E. tereticornis Sm. This occasionally flowers in the broaddeaved (juvenile) 

 stage. 



E. tetragona F.v.M. (Quoted by Diels.) 



E. trackyphloia F.v.M. See Bailey's proposed form fruticosa discussed at 

 Part XLII, p. 43. 



E. umbra R. T. Baker. Some of the juvenile leaves very broad, but all rather 

 thin and paler on the underside. Mr. Cambage and I found it fruiting as a dense scrub 

 of 3-4 feet high on the summit of First Point, Kincumber. 



E. uncinata Turcz. is one -of the species in which the juvenile form of foliage 

 often remains side by side with the mature foliage. 



