| 516 J. H. MAIDEN. 
specimen’”’ referred to, so resembles Port Jackson specimens. 
of E. Luehmanniana and E. obtusiflora, as to be worthy of 
a passing reference. 
The seedlings of H. virgata from the Spit and elsewhere 
(including typical Luehmanniana from the National Park), 
are identical; they also are identical with those of EH. 
virgata var. altior (E. Luehmanniana var. altior = FR. 
oreades R.T. Baker). The above all show glaucous plants 
when they are a few inches high. In their young stages 
they resemble those of E. obtusiflora DC. a good deal, but 
the latter form yellowish-green seedlings at a few inches 
high. Space will not allow my dwelling on the matter of 
seedlings on the present occasion. 
24. H. VITELLINA Naudin, “‘Descr. et emploi des Euc. 
introd, en Europe,”’ Antibes (France), 1891, p. 65, and BH. 
VITREA R. T. Baker, Proc. Linn. Soc. N.S.W., xxv, 803, 
(1900) with plate xv. 
In my C.R. vi, 164-167 (1905), I drew attention to the 
fact that Naudin looked upon his species as a natural hybrid 
between EH. coriacea and EK. amygdalina, a point I em- 
phasised at p. 167 as regards EH. vitrea. Without suggesting 
hybridism, the original description draws attention to the 
affinity of the new species to the two species named. I 
refer to the vitellina-vitrea question in C.R., vii, p. 189. 
In my “Forest Flora of N.S.W.,”’ part 23, plate 86 (1906), 
I figured HE. vitrea from such material as was available to 
me at the time, and both here and in some of the illustra- 
tions at pl. 34, C.R., broader leaved forms were shown than 
in Mr. Baker’s original drawing of the type. 
The type of H. vitrea came from New South Wales 
(Crookwell, Bungendore, and Marulan). In my O.R. (see~ 
also Explanation of Plates) and Forest Flora, I added a 
number of New South Wales localities with more or less 
