go 
Journal of Agricultural Research 
Vol. II. No. a 
(National Herbarium); no number, no date, two sheets of two and three sterile twigs, 
Paris (Museum) 1 ; no number, no date, four sterile twigs, Dahlem. 1 
North Kennedy District— Brigalow Scrub, south of Burdekin River, between 
latitude 20° and 21 0 S. Ferdinand Mueller, no number, October 14 to 30, 1856 
(Mueller, 1857, p. 169, 1858, p. 150); three twigs, one with flower and two with 
fruits, Kew. 
South Kennedy District. —Head of Suttor River. Rutherland, no number, no 
date [before 1867], two twigs, one with young fruits, one sterile, Kew. 
Maranoa District. —Dublin County, near Forestvale, between Possession Creek 
and " Camp 32, ’ ’ near the junction of Maranoa and Merevale Rivers. T. L. Mitchell, 
October 17, 1846, three sheets with flowering twigs, 2 Kew; "Interior of New South 
Wales, Sir T. L. Mitchell, Presented 1847,” two twigs, one with fruits, British 
Museum; two twigs, one with flower (see fig. 1), Harvard (Gray Herbarium). 
Warrego District. —F. M. Bailey, no number, no date (before 1911), two twigs, 
one with flower buds, one sterile, Washington, D. C. (National Herbarium). 
In vicinity of Tambo. Collected for James Pink (S. P. I. No. 29537), January, 
1911; fruits only (fig. 2; see also PI. XLV, fig. 1, U. S. Dept, of Agr. Yearbook 
for 1911), Washington, D. C. (Department of Agriculture Economic Collections, 
National Herbarium); Walter T. Swingle (C. P. B. No. 7239), February 20, 1914; 
twigs cut from greenhouse plants grown from seed sent by James Pink, Washington, 
D. C. (National Herbarium). 
Darling Downs District. —Lytton County, near Chinchilla. "Growing natu¬ 
rally on the Condamine River, 12 miles from Chinchilla Rly. Station/' collected 
for John Williams (S. P. I. No. 29660), December, 1910, seeds only, Washington, 
D. C. (Department of Agriculture Economic Collections, National Herbarium); 
Walter T. Swingle (C. P. B. No. 7244), February 20, 1914, leafy twigs from plants 
grown in Department of Agriculture greenhouse from seed sent by John Williams, 
Washington, D. C. (National Herbarium). 
Aubigny County, Dalby. T. L. Bancroft, no number, no date, "Desert or native 
kumquat, used by settlers," one twig with flowers, Washington, D. C. (National 
Herbarium). 
Marsh County, Goondiwindi. Collected for J. H. Maiden, no number, May, 1912, 
twig and ripe fruits, Washington, D. C. (National Herbarium); Walter T. Swin¬ 
gle (C. P. B. No. 7522), February 20, 1914, leafy twigs from plant grown in Depart¬ 
ment of Agriculture greenhouse from seed sent by J. H. Maiden, Washington, D. C. 
(National Herbarium). 
II. New South Wales. 
Lincoln County, Dubbo. Collected for J. H. Maiden (C. P. B. No. 2901), April 
22, 1910, fruits only, Washington, D. C. (National Herbarium). 
Finch County, Collarenebri. Collected for J. H. Maiden (S. P. I. No. 37808) before 
March 16, 1914; twigs, leaves, and fruits, Washington, D. C. (National Herbarium). 
1 This material has no original label, but is probably from the same collection as No. 58. All of these 
specimens show pedicels which have lost the flowers or young fruits. 
2 Triphasia glauca was probably based by Uindley on several syntypes, and it is now difficult to decide 
which specimen should be designated as the lectotype. One sheet (Herb. Hook., 1867) with four twigs 
has pencil sketches of the flower parts by “ J. F.” on a separate sheet. One with two twigs (Herb. Benth., 
1854) has a printed label like that on the specimen in Gray Herbarium. The third specimen (Herb. Hook., 
1867), also with two twigs, has pencil sketches on the sheet of flower parts and the following notes: “Cal. 
lobes 4-5, small, unequal imbricate ciliate. Petals 4-5 fleshy, unequal, concave, sessile[?]. Stamens 
15-20, anthers oblong, sessile[?j, 2 loc. 2 longit. rim. Ovary. Above these notes thenames “Dodonaea,” 
“Celastrus,” and “Cfr Diosma ” are written as if in an attempt to identify the plant. On the same sheet 
are mounted three twigs collected by Mueller on the Burdekin River. These eight twigs in the Kew 
Herbarium, together with the two in the British Museum and the two in the Gray Herbarium, are 
probably syntypes. 
