Euphrasia.| " SCROPHULARIACEAE. 841 
veins; peduncles 2-3 times as long as the leaves, slender, pubescent. 
Calyx 4-lobed to 4-way down or more: lobes ovate-lanceolate, acute. 
Corolla-tube longer than the calyx; limb wide-spreading, upper arched, 
2-lobed; lower lip 3-lobed. Capsule not exceeding: the calyx; seeds 
many, 8-12 in each cell. 
SoutH Istanp: North-west Nelson—Mount Rochiort, Mount Murchison, Mount 
Lyell, W. Townson / Denniston, J. Caffin/ Mount Frederic, Millerton, P. G. Morgan ! 
Buckland Peaks, Peirze / 1500-4000 ft. December—February. 
A distinct species, easily distinguished by the narrow ovate-rhomboid leaves, 
large yellow flowers, and long slender peduncles. 
5. E. revoluta Hook. f. Fl. Nov. Zel. 1 (1853) 199.—Annual, or some- 
times the rootstock perennial. Stems 1-4in. high, very slender, much 
or sparingly branched from the base, often creeping and putting up few 
or many ascending branchlets, more or less glandular-pubescent. Leaves 
in rather distant pairs, sessile, very variable in size, the lowest usually the 
smallest, }-lin. long, obovate-cuneate, obtuse or subacute, narrowed to 
the base, furnished with 1-3 teeth on each side, glandular-pubescent or 
glabrous, margins revolute. Flowers few towards the tips of the branches, 
large, 4-2 in. diam.; peduncles shorter or longer than the leaves. Calyx 
shortly 4-lobed; lobes triangular, acute, much shorter than the tube. 
Corolla-tube funnel-shaped, exceeding the calyx; limb spreading; upper 
lip 2-lobed; lower lip 3-lobed, lobes deeply emarginate. Capsule oblong, 
obtuse; seeds numerous in each cell——Handb. N.Z. Fl. (1864) 220; 
Wettst. Monog. Euphr. (1896) 266, t. xiv, f. 8; Cheesem. Man. N.Z. Fi. 
(1906) 554. 
Norra Istanp: Mount Hikurangi, S. Dodgshun; central voleanic plateau, Cock- 
ayne, T'. F. C.; Ruahine Mountains, Colenso / H. Hill! Petrie! Kaimanawa 
Mountains, B. C. Aston; Tararua Mountains, Buchanan! Petrie!  SoutTa ISLAND : 
Not uncommon in mountain districts throughout. 2000-5500 ft. December—March. 
A very variable plant, best distinguished by the tender and much divided habit 
of growth, unusually large flowers, and very long slender peduncles. 
6. E. australis Petrie in Trans. N.Z. Inst. xlii (1911) 255.—Very 
variable in size and habit, usually slender and diffusely branched, 4-8 in. 
high or even more, pubescent with short white hairs. Leaves usually 
in sparsely placed pairs, }-4in. long, varying in shape from ovate- 
orbicular to ovate-oblong, shortly petiolate, 3—-4-lobed on either side with 
a broader terminal one, firm but scarcely coriaceous, glabrous or nearly 
so, distinctly veined; margins recurved. Flowers rather large, in axillary 
opposite pairs, }-in. long; peduncles often 2 or 3 times as long as the 
leaves, pubescent with whitish hairs. Calyx 4-lobed, pubescent, lobes 
short, obtuse, margins recurved. Corolla whitish, funnel-shaped; throat 
expanded; upper lip short, obtuse; lower lip much reflexed, 3-lobed. 
Capsule broadly obovoid or turbinate. Seeds 4-5 in each cell. 
_ Soutn Istanp: Nelson—Westport district, W. Zownson! Otago—Routeburn, 
Clinton Saddle, Petrie! J. W. Murdock! Lake Manapouri, Lake Hauroto, -/. Crosby 
Smith. 3000-5000 ft. 
__ In the first edition of this work I included this in #. revoluta. Mr. Petrie con- 
siders it to be allied to his #, Cockayniana, but it is a larger plant, with differently 
toothed leaves. 
