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XXIV.—Remarks on the Botany of the Antarctic Voyages. 
Flora of New Zealand, Part 1., of J. D. Hooxer, 
M.D.RB.N., F.B.S., &c. &. By Ronarp C. Gunn, Esq., 
F.L.S. [Read 8th Murch, 1853.] 
Tue first part of the Flora of New Zealand, by Dr. J. D. 
Hooker, has recently arrived in the Colony, and as few 
persons are likely to possess copies of the work, it may be 
interesting to many to compare the Flora of those islands 
with that of Tasmania, lying, as they do, in the same lati- 
tude and not more than twenty degrees of longitude apart. 
It may be as well to observe that the Flora of New Zea- 
land forms the second part of the Botany of the Antarctic 
voyages of H. M. ships Zrebus and Terror, and that as 
the Flora of Tasmania is to form the third and concluding 
portion, I will adopt with the present work the same course 
which I took with the ‘ Flora Antarctica,’ (v¢de Tasmanian 
Journal, yol. iii. p. 66), and present in a tabular form the 
genera and species of the New Zealand Flora, so that its 
peculiarities may be seen at a glance. 
The natural Orders and Genera zoé represented in Tas- 
mania are distinguished by an asterisk. 
Total Species| Species 
common to 
Natural Orders, Genera, New mealana New Zealand 
& Tasmania, 
—— em 
Clematis ..........+- 
* Myosurus ......... 
Ranunculacez ..........++.+- Ranunculus ......... 
eelOSiiitk« airnaxire 
Aa ITIULYRmectev treats © 
Cardamine ......... 
Nasturtium ......... 
Barbarea ....00.00006 
Lepidium ... ore 
Viola....... oR ITY 
eee, Hymenanthera...... 
WiOlLATICeS Feesss.sssseserseeree 7) Melicytus 
Droseracex Drosera ..-.e+0+e 
Seen eee eraeeneree 
Pittosporese vce. | Pittosporum .....-+- 
_ 
Magnoliacese.....-...ssesee00 
Crnciferarretstecsttreserte rece 
CORR NNR KNORR De oO 
-_ 
i 
