256 J. H. MAIDEN. 



and about 21 miles north of Jibberding. This Lake Monger 

 is not to be confused with a Lake Monger in the Perth 

 district.] 



XV. A. ramulosa W. V. Fitzgerald, in Journ. W.A. Nat* 

 Hist. Soc. No. 1, p. 15 (May, 1904). 



This Western Australian species which has long been 

 confused with A. brachystachya Benth., I have figured 

 and described it in Part lxi of my "Forest Flora of New 

 South Wales." I refer my readers to that work for details 

 as to synonymy, localities, etc. 



XVI. A. linophylla W.V.F., Journ. W. A. Nat. Hist. Soc. 

 16, (1904). 



Described without flowers, and the affinity given as A. 

 xylocarpa A. Ounn., on the pods. Type from Mount 

 Magnet. A label of Mr. Fitzgerald's gives the additional 

 localities of Nannine and Cue. 



A specimen from Isaac Tyson, about 1897, from Mount 

 Narryer, Murchison River, has the label "No. 50, one of 

 the principal food seeds of the natives. Name 'Burgedur/ 

 Settlers' name is 'Wanderry MulgaV 



Cue (W. D. Campbell, June, 1902; J. H. M., October, 

 1909). 



This pungent phylloded Acacia with succulent pods has 

 the pods suspended vertically like tallow candles hanging 

 by their wicks, giving the shrub or tree a singular appear- 

 ance. The pods are quite straight. Around Cue the plant 

 is a tall shrub, beyond Yalgoo, going west, it becomes a 

 tree of say 20 feet, with a stem of six inches and more. 



The flowers are undescribed, and may be described as 

 follows: — Flowers in nearly sessile spikes. Floral bracts 

 thick and short. Oalyx divided nearly to the base; has a 

 few hairs. Oalyx about a third as long as the corolla. 



