114 
The Queensland Naturalist April, 1936. 
37. White-throated Tree Creeper (558. CUmacteris leuco- 
phaea). 
38. Mistletoe Swallow (564. Dicaeum hirnndinaceum ) . 
39. Black-headed Pardalote (569. Pardalotus melanoee- 
phalus) . 
40. Grey-breasted Silvereye (574. Zosterops lateralis). 
41. White-naped honeveater (578. Melithreptus lunatus). 
42. Scarlet Honeveater (586. Myzomela sanguinolenta ) . 
43. Eastern Spinebill (691. A canth or hyn chits tenuiros- 
tris ) . 
44. Little Brown Honeveater (597. Gliciphila indistinct a ) . 
45. Yellow-faced Honey eater (614. Meliphaga chrysops). 
46. Noisy Miner (634. Myzaniha mela/nocephala ) . 
47. Red-browed Pinch (662. Aegintha temporalis). 
48 Austn. Crow (692. Gowns cecilae). 
49. Grey Butcher-Bird (702. Cracticus torquatus). 
The species number is that of the RA.O.U. Official 
Check List. 
BRISBANE DISTRICT. 
Bv C. T. WHITE, Government Botanist. 
(Continued from the “Queensland Naturalist,” Yol. IX., 
22. Eucalyptus trachyphloia , White Bloodwood. 
DESCRIPTION. — Medium to large tree (in some 
situations flowering and fruiting as a shrub), the bark 
somewhat spongy and broken up into irregular tessella- 
tions. Young coppice shoots clothed with rather scattered 
stiff spreading hairs. Leaves on coppice shoots peltate or 
subpeltate, oblong to ovate, lanceolate, varying consider- 
ably in relation of length to breadth, up to 4 inches long 
and If inches wide, markedly paler on the under surface, 
veins and veinlets distinct, the midrib and principal nerves 
clothed on the under surface with scattered bristle-like 
hairs, leaf apex blunt and acute, base rounded or subcor- 
date. Ordinary (secondary or adult) leaves straight and 
falcate, narrow-lanceolate, apex acute, often finely drawn 
out towards the ends, rather coriaceous in texture, green 
and often rather glossy above, paler and more opaque be- 
neath; petoile and leaf-stalk about 4 inch long, blade 
mostly about 3 inches long and 4 inch wide, but varying 
somewhat both in length and width; lateral nerves parallel 
and close together, but indistinct particularly in the mor<> 
coriaceous leaves, intramarginal vein very close to the 
THE EUCALYPTS OR GUM TREES OF THE 
p. 32.) 
