71 
State as "along the North Coast Railway Line." He also states that A. undulifolia 
var. humilis is a synonym, perhaps following Bentham, a decision with which I do 
not agree. I believe it to b3 a distinct species. It is certainly not a form of A. 
undulifolia. 
So far as I know, it is confined to Queensland, and therefore I cannot deal 
with it in this work. It reminds one of A. vomsriformis A. Cunn. It is, however, 
less prostrate in habit, as it forms small upright, slightly pendulous bushes about 3 
or 4 feet, but sometimes up to 6 feet high, in moist, sandy low-lying places. It is 
found at Bundaberg, Noosa River, top of Glass-house Mountain, &c. 
Varieties and refuted varieties. This is a variable species, and a number of 
varieties (too many, I think) have been constituted. 
First of all let us consider the type. 
As regards the indument we have 
"Phyllodia glabrous, branches hairy." (Don.) 
Phyllodia " smooth ; branchlets .... densely clothed with short 
cinereous hair." (Hooker, in Sot. Mag. under t. 3,394.) 
Then we have 
A. piligera A. Cunn., (combined with normal species by Bentham), hirta, 
pilis laxis patentibus. (A. Cunn). 
Var. setigera A. Cunn., (also combined with normal species by Bentham), 
". . . . branches .... pilose." .... "Margin (of phyllodes) .... 
ciliated with long hairs ; the surface has a few scattered hairs." (Hook. Ic. t. 
clxvi). 
There is no doubt that, as regards the shape, size, and vestiture (or absence 
of it) the phyllodes vary a good deal. 
The type comes from " rocky hills near Bathurst," and was subsequently 
found "to the north-west of that settlement." Although I have not a specimen 
of the type, the following specimens are not far removed from it 
Mullion Creek, near Orange, 3 or 4 feet high (E. H. Cambage). Molong (J. 
L. Boorman). 
Phyllodia nearly oval, acuminate, ciliate, rhachises with weak hairs. Bulga- 
road, Singleton (R. H. Cambage). 
A little more hirsute 2 to 2| feet high, east of 10-mile peg, Inverell to 
Tingha-road (R. H. Cambage, No. 944). 
A few weak hairs, all but glabrous on the rhachises; phyllodia entirely 
glabrous. Merriwa, also plentiful on the sandstone near Collaroy (J. L. Boorman 
and J.H.M.). 
