172 
No. 79. Fart XXI . 
Casuarina inophloia , F.v.M. and Bailey. 
THE THREADY-BARKED OAK. 
(Family Casuarinaceal) 
ILLUSTRATIONS. 
Photograph of a trunk, showing the thready or sub-fibrous bark. 
Photograph of some trees near Warialda.—(Rev. H. M. R. Rupp.) The smaller trees are also 
inophloia. 
No. 83. Part XXIII; also No, 89. Part XXV. 
Dysoxylon Fraseranum , Benth. 
THE ROSEWOOD. 
(Family Meliacea:.) 
Fruits. —See vol. iii, p. 31. 
With reference to the Figure E, Plate 85, while Rosewood fruits are normally 
as figured, I have seen some which are distinctly egg-shaped. 
ILLUSTRATION. 
“Rosewood,” northern New South Wales. This block originally appeared in the Annual Report 
of the Forest Department of New South Wales, 1905-6. It is there labelled Dysoxylon Lesserlianum, 
which is a synonym of D. Fraseranum , as explained in this work, Part XXIII, p. 28. 
No. 85. Part XXIII . 
Acacia decurrens , Willd., 
AND ITS VARIETIES. 
(Family Leguminosa : Mimosea.) 
Aboriginal Name.— See vol. iii, p. 47. 
“Tooloy” is the native name for Wattle-tree gum according to Mr. J. G. 
Saxton, Victoria. 
Bark. — See vol. iii, p. 48. 
The following are references to recent literature :— 
Uber Black Wattle Wirtshaft in Natal. A r on Dr. W. Holtz, Grogsherzoglich. Badischen 
Forstpraktikanten. Der Tropenpflanzer, July, 1906, p. 445. 
See also Bulletin No. 11 of the Hawaii Agricultural Experiment Station, “The Black Wattle 
(Acacia decurrens) in Hawaii,” by Jared G. Smith (1906). 
