68 J. H. MAIDEN. 



A dwarf form, eight feet high, Waterfall (R. H. Cambage 

 No. 4169). 



Affinity. 



With E. capitellata, Sm., with which it has long been 

 confused. E. capitellata is a tree, sometimes a large tree, 

 and the organs are all larger, while there is an absence, or 

 almost absence, of stellate hairs in the young shoots. B. 

 Camfieldi is a Mallee, forming a dense undergrowth, from 

 three to about twelve feet high. E. capitellata appears 

 to be absent from the Hornsby district, where the new 

 species is not rare. The juvenile leaves (suckers) of E* 

 Camfieldi are smaller, more orbicular to cordate, scabrous 

 with a persistent stellate tomentum, apparently always 

 present around the base of the adult plants, forming 

 thickets, similar to the low stunted forms of Angophora 

 cordifolia. They are never lanceolate like those of E. 

 capitellata. The new species has buds smaller than those 

 of E. capitellata and less attenuate, usually ovoid; in some 

 specimens they are almost round and devoid of angles. The 

 common peduncle is shorter than in E. capitellata and 

 quadrangular to nearly terete. The peduncle of E. capi- 

 tellata is very often more compressed in the early bud. 

 The fruits are smaller than those of E. capitellata, but 

 otherwise very similar. 



The juvenile foliage shown in figures 4a and 4b, Plate 37, 

 Part viii of my "Critical Revision of the Genus Eucalyptus,'* 

 (under E. capitellata) and also figure B, Plate 106, Part 

 xxvin of my " Forest Flora of New South Wales," belong 

 to E. Camfieldi. 



It is the form (b) for the most part, of p. 493 of this 

 Journal, Vol. lii (1918). 



2. E. de Beuzevillei n. sp. 



Arbor amplaplusve minus ve glauca; cortice Iseve, lamellis 

 longissimis decidua, trunci basi aspero-lamellosa, ligno pallido fere 



