Brick son and Willis, A Avte Triygcr-pltml 



rvict. Nat. 

 L Vol. 73 



latter species are l;oth taller and larger. $ musckola is sparsely leafy below 

 the rosette which is much larger (leaves 1-2 cm. wide) ; its petals, though 

 bifid, are not as widely forked, while the ealyv is usually entirely glandular- 

 hairy and has blunt lobes. £ fissilobnm hears only small, linear, bract-like 

 leaves scattered along the stem ; the Mower is similar to $, nmsckoln^ but 

 with less, glandular-hairy calyx. 



The foregoing description is based upon dried, but well-preserved, speci- 

 mens which were found among sheets of St\'fi*iiutn sdiiwitlnt-tu at the 

 National Herbarium, Melbourne. Living material should he studied, whenever 

 available, since it may yield additional data on the throat appendages— so 

 difficult to examine satisfactorily in pressed flowers. 



.Siy!nii\tm q nvdnf it n'oT u rt\ $p. iv»v, 



1. H»1»it ul KrowOS; 2- Basal rnselte of leaves, ami she-nth; i. Viewer, iticluclirtR upper 



IHVrliou of calyx. Far cyni|m.riatm — A. Lvarfs ol .V. tiinycKolu F. Mnvll,, 5- Flower of 



.?. ininr'tcoUi i 6 leaves 0* S\ fisiifobum V MikII 



CORRECTION TO PREVIOUS ARTICLE 



In our "Critical Notes on Australian Styliduicew^ \V\ct. Nal. 72: 131 

 ( "Jan 1956)1, the following amendment is necessary to the. paragraph dis- 

 ctiftsirfg affinities of I.cvenhookm nctoiutitttUtta: 



In second last line of page, delete the two words "non-umbellate inflores- 

 cences" and after "petal" (last line) add— "while the two latter species have 

 non-umbellate inflorescences " [The flowers of I. h-planthn are decidedly 

 umbellate 1 



-R. E & J.K.W. 



