160 THE AUSTRALIAN NATURALIST. 
2. GUODENIA Sm. 
Key to the Sections and Undersections 
of New South Wales species 
of Goodenia. 
1. Ovules either imbricate in 1 or 2 rows in 
each cell of the ovary or few 
and erect from the base 
2. Pedicels with small bracteoles 
3. Flowers in long terminal leafless 
spikes, racemes or panicles, 
with small bracteoles on the 
pedicels. Stems leafy or the 
leaves crowded at the base or 
rosulate 
3*, Flowers on axillary or radical 
peduncles, the pedicels dis- 
tinctly bracteolate. 
4. Herbs with rosulate leaves, the 
stem-leaves abbreviated except 
the lower ones 
L*, Undershrubs or rarely herbs 
with erect leafy stems 
2*, Pedicels without bracteoles 
5. Stems mostly erect and leafy, 
the lower jeaves not crowded, 
Peduncles axillary, often artic- 
ulate below the flowers ... 
5*. Lower leaves vosulate, stem- 
leaves few, small, or wanting. 
Peduncles radical, _ rarely 
axillary, often elongated 
1*. Ovules very numerous, closely packed 
in more than 2 vows in each 
cell of the ovary 
. Section I, 
Hugoodenia. 
. Under-section A. 
Bracteolatae. 
. Series i. 
Racemosae. 
. Series 11. 
Rosulatae 
. Series iii. 
Suffruticosae. 
. Under-section B. 
Hbracteslatae. 
. Series iv. 
Koliosue. 
. Series y. 
Pedicellosae 
. Section II. 
Amphichita. 
