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QUEENSLAND HERBARIUM 
DEPARTMENT OF PRIMARY INDUSTRIES 
BRISBANE 


AUSTROBAILEYA 


VOLUME 1 
NUMBER 1 
1977. 


oy 


CONTENTS 


Page 

Four new species of Eucalyptus. 

By S. T. Blake .. - = A eo oi a er 1 
Miscellaneous notes on Australian Pteridophytes, I. 

By $. B, Andrews i nf ats a ne: ne ne 11 
Notes on Solanum (Solanaceae) in Australia. 

By R, J. F, Henderson ae na ry: Yr 3 ; 3 13 
The deletion of Pentapanax Seem. from the flora of Australia. 

By W. R. Philipson .. . - - ri i ui 23 
Notes on Leguminosae, I, 

By L. Pedley .. ae we a3 rw ea By ts 25 
Allosyncarpia ternata, a new genus and species of Myrtaceae subfamily 

Leptospermoideae from northern Australia. 

By 8S. T. Blake .. a 3 J La ied i $3 43 
The genus Verfticordia in northern Australia. 

By N. B. Byrnes ny ie vl ere et ot , 47 
Polycarpaea (Caryophyllaceae) in Australia. 

By L, Pedley .. - > ts bt 7 4 es 49 
Notes on Queensland Orchidaceae, I, 


By P. J, Lavarack. 7 Bes vi Ess iH. 4 ve 63 


Editor :- L. Pedley 


FOREWORD 


The genus Austrobaileya was first described by C. T. White in 1933 from 
fragmentary material collected by 8. F. Kajewski on the Atherton Tableland in 
north Queensland. Descriptions of two species, both rainforest lianas and both 
endemic to very restricted areas in north Queensland, have been published. The 
genus has provided a challenge to many eminent phylogenetic botanists who have 
variously ascribed it to a number of primitive families. Current thought places 
it in a family of its own, Austrobaileyaceae, with rather obscure affinities. 


Austrobaileya was named in honour of two Baileys, F. M. Bailey the 
noted Queensland botanist, and I. W. Bailey, U.S.A. (S. L. Everist, pers. coi.). 
The association of the name Austrobaileya with F. M. Bailey and C. T. White, 
the doyens of the first century of Queensland botany, the endemic nature of 
the genus and the challenge it has presented the botanical world make Austro- 
baileya a very apt title for this new journal. 


The emergence of “Austrobaileya” sees the demise of “Contributions from 
the Queensland Herbarium”. During the past decade, at irregular intervals, 
twenty issues of the latter series were published. Each contribution covered a 
single taxonomic subject, some of a very restricted nature, others extensive, some 
in great detail. Such a format is not suited to the publication of shorter notes 
which may be of great taxonomic interest. The new journal has been devised 
to allow greater flexibility in publication and each part may contain a varied 
collection of papers, mainly of taxonomic interest. 


Dr. §. T. Blake and, in later years, Mr. L. Pedley have maintained in 
“Contributions” a high standard of presentation and publication. The task of 
guiding “Austrobaileya” lies with Mr. Pedley and, I believe the first part makes 
a major contribution towards better understanding of the Queensland flora. 


R. W. JOHNSON, Director. 


Queensland Herbarium, Brisbane. 
10 March 1977. 


Austrobaileya 1 (1): 1-10 (1977) 
FOUR NEW SPECIES OF EUCALYPTUS 


By 8S. T. Blake* 


Queensland Herbarium, Brisbane 


Summary 


Three new species of Eucalyptus from Queensland, FE. brassiana, E. henryi and E. 
melanoleuca, and one from Malesia, E. wrophylla, are described and their relationships and 
distribution discussed. 


Eucalyptus brassiana S. T. Blake, sp. nov. affinis E. tereticorni sed cortice trunci 


plus persistenti, alabastris majoribus, fructu fnajore disco angustiore 
differt. Typus: Blake 20194. 


Arbor 15—20m alta, corona sparsa et ramulis + pendulis praedita. Cortex dimorphus 
in trunco (saltem sub medio) persistens cinereus sulcatus vel rimosus usque ad 1:2cm 
crassus, alibi griseus vel caesius vel cremeus, laevis in schedis taeniformibus tenuibus 
decorticans. Ramuli tenues, angulati juvenes compressi. Folia alterna raro subopposita 
petiolis tortis 1+:2—2-2 cm longis anguste lanceolata =< falcata gradatim acuta, ad basam 
saepe obliquam angustata, subtus primo pallidiora tantem concoloria vel fere concoloria, 
crebre punctata, plerumque 10-17 cm longa 1-2:8cm lata, pro more 7—15~ies longiora 
quam lata; costa supra leviter impressa subtus prominens, nervi tenues haud conspicui, 
laterales primarii utrinsecus costam 25-30 sub angulo 30°-5S0° abeuntes nervus intra 
marginalis a margine 0:7-2mm_ distans reticulationes obscurae. Umbellae in axillis 
superioribus sitae saepe etiam speciminibus terminales, singulae, pedunculis 1-2 cm longis, 
4-7 florae; pedicelli 5-10 mm longi, graciles, sursum sub fructu incrassati. Alabastra 
angustuis ovoidea + acuta vel acuminata, 14-17 mm longa, 6-7 mm lata, tenuiter rugulosa; — 
tubus calycis late cyathiformis, parte superiore libra operculum conicum, acutum atque 
leviter acuminatum vel leviter curvum, tubo equilatum et 3-—3-5-ies longius. Stamina 
ca lcm longa, omnia fertilia; antherae versatiles, obovato—oblongae, cellulis parallelis in 
rimis longitudinalibus dehiscentibus; glans magna dorsalis. Ovariumn semisuperum, pars 
superior a tubo calycis distans; breviter cylindricus apice late conicum; discus tenuis 
partem ovarii cylindricum tegens, Fructus ambitu latissime ellipticus vel circularis, circa 
10-13 mm longus 9-11 mm latus; tubus cyathiformis calyci dimidiam longitineum formans, 
fere laevis, margine angustus planusque; discus tenuis, vittaeformis, altus, capsulae adpressus; 
capsula semiexserta; valvae 4—5 omnes exsertae, subdeltoideae, incurvae, dimidiam partem 
exsertam capsulae adaequantes interdum style cuspidatae. Plantulae glabrae, caule acutissime 
tetraquetra + alato; folia juvenilia 5-8 jugata in petiolis brevibus angustatae discoloria, 
anguste elliptica vel anguste elliptica ovala usque angustissime ovata 3-7-ies longiora 
quam latiora -+ obtusa; folia intermedia (e surculis orta) alterna, petiolata, ovata, usque 
15cm longa et 7-3 cm Jata, duplo longiora quam lata. 


Trees 15-20 m tall, crown sparse and branchlets pendulous. Bark with two 
forms, on the trunk persistent up to about the middle, ash grey, furrowed or 
with numerous fissures, to 1-2 cm thick, elsewhere grey, lavender-blue or cream, 
smooth, decorticating in thin ribbon-like sheets. Branchlets thin, angular, flattened 
when young. Leaves alternate rarely sub-opposite with twisted petioles 1-2- 
2:2cm long, narrowly lanceolate -+ falcate gradually acute, often obliquely 
narrowed at the base, at first paler below becoming concolorous or nearly so, 


* Died 24 February 1973. 


Z 


closely punctate, mostly 10-17 cm long, 1-2-8 cm wide, commonly 7-15 times 
longer than wide; midvein slightly impressed above prominent below, fine veins 
inconspicuous, with 25-35 primary veins on each side subtending at between 
30°--50°; intermarginal vein 0-7~2 mm from the margin; reticulations obscure. 
Umbels solitary in the upper axils and also terminal in some specimens, with 
peduncles 1-2 cm long; 4-7 flowers on slender pedicels 5-10 mm long not 
thickened below the fruit. Flower buds narrow ovoid -—. acute or acuminate, 
14-17 mm long, 6-7 mm wide, somewhat finely wrinkled; calyx tube broadly 
cyathiform, superior part free; operculum conical, acute and slightly acuminate 
or curved, as wide as the tube and 3-3-5 times longer. Stamens ca 1 cm long, 
all fertile, anthers versatile obovate—oblong, cells parallel dehiscing by longtitud- 
inal slits, glands large and dorsal. Ovary semisuperior, the superior part separated 
from the calyx tube, shortly cylindrical, broadly conical at the apex; narrow 
disc partly concealing the cylindrical part of ovary. Fruit very broadly elliptical 
or circular in outline about 10-13mm long, 9-11 mm wide, calyx cyathiform 
the tube making up half the length, nearly smooth, margin narrow and flat; disc 
thin, bandlike, raised, adpressed to the capsule; capsule semi-exsert; valves 4—5 
all exsert subdeltoid, incurved, included and exserted parts of capsule about equal, 
sometimes with pointed style. Seedling glabrous; stem very acutely tetraquetrous 
++ winged; juvenile leaves 5—8 in pairs tapered into short petioles, discolorous, 
narrowly elliptical or narrowly elliptic-ovate to most narrowly ovate, 3-7 times 
longer than wide -- obtuse; intermediate leaves (and reversion growth) alternate, 
petiolate, ovate, to 15 cm long and 7-3 cm wide, twice as long as wide. 


Type: Cooktown, 28 Jan 1958, §. T. Blake 20194 (BRI, holo; NSW, FRI, 
K, iso). 


New GurINeA: West New Guinea: Along track to Keliki, Aug 1941, Anta 245, Papua: 
Wassi Kussa R., Feb 1890, AfcGregor; Tarara, Wassi Kussa R., Dec 1936, Brass 8402: 
Tarara, Jan 1937, Brass 8719; Dara L, Apr 1936, Brass 6428, Dec 1950, Jackson NGF 2748; 
Feb 1953, Hart NGF 5022A; Dagwa, Oriomo R., Mar 1934, Brass 5947, 6004, 6005, Dec 
1950, Jackson NGF 2729, Mar 1953, Hart NGF 5022; Wuroi, Oriomo R., Mar 1934, Brass 
6020; 8°50’S 143°15°R, Jan 1959, Gray & White NGF 10435. Queensland: Cook District: 
Weipa, Jul 1962, Baxter 2441; Wenlock, 13°06’S 142°57’E, Jul 1968, Pedley 2763; Mcllwrath 
Range, Silver Plains Stn, Aug 1966, Voick; near Finch Bay, Cooktown, Jun 1968, MfeKern; 
Bloomfield R., Petrie; Lankelly Ck, 8 miles NE Coen, Oct 1969, Webb & Tracey 8357; 
between Portland Roads and Iron Range, Oct 1968, Webb & Tracey 8356. 


This species is found on river levees outside riverain forest often in pure 
stands or in “savannah” forests usually associated with other species of the genus. 


E. brassiana resembles E. tereticornis Sm. more closely than any other in its 
foliage, long operculum, partly superior ovary and capsule, the lower part of the 
free portion covered by the disc, the claw-like incurved valves and seeds, but the 
trunk has much greater development of persistent thick bark, the leaves show a 
tendency to be discolorous, the buds and fruit are larger and the disc in the fruit 
is thinner, not domed and does not extend over the rim of the calyx tube. The 
fruits resemble those of EZ. exserta F. Muell, of eastern Queensland but this species 
usually has much smaller buds and fruits with a relatively shorter operculum, less 
of the disc on the free portion of the ovary and the valves of the capsule + 
excurved at the base before incurving upwards so that the outline of the fruit 
is not circular, very narrow intermediate leaves and brown rather than red wood. 


The rough persistent bark often extends into the crown of the larger trees-but-a ~~~ 


shrubby states are known with a comparatively small amount of persistent bark. 


E., brassiana differs from both EF. tereticornis and E. exserta in the tendency 
to flower only in the upper axils; frequently with an umbel apparently terminating 
the twigs so that the flowers appear to be on the crown rather than within it. 


Figure 1. Eucalyptus brassiana S. T. Blake. Drawing supplied by the Director, Division 
of Botany, Department of Forests, Lae, Papua New Guinea. 


4 


Eucalyptus henryi S. T. Blake, species nova affinis KE. maculatae Hook. et 
E, citriodorae Hook., sed alabastris unicostatis, operculo calycis tubo 
aequilato subaequilongo rugosulo, foliis intermediis multo majoribus 
glabris rarissime peltatis praecipue differt. Typus: Blake 19889. 


Arbor magna trunco lacunis crebris impressa, cortice laevi deciduo + maculato obtecta; 
ramuli acute angulati -: tetraquetri, Folia juvenilia circa 10, omnia alterna, longe peticlata, 
sparsim setosa, ovata 1-2 suprema interdum peltata, discoloria, venorum lateralium paribus 4 
vel pluribus praedita. Felia intermedia alterna, breviuscule petiolata, ut plurimum 1-2 infima 
peltata, vel oblonga vel ovata vel ovato-lanceolata, -- caudato-acuminata, glaberrima, viridia, 
plurivenosa, rigida, usque ad 30 cm Jonga et 15 cm lata, superiora + concoloria. Folia adulta 
alterna, petiolata, glaberrima, minime discoloria; petioli robusti 1-2-5cm longi; laminae 
lanceolatae, longe acuminatae Jeviter falcatae vel fere rectac, 16-28 cm longae, 2-7--4:5 cm 
latae, 5—7-ies longae quam latae, venis utrinsecus costam 45—55 ex angulo 35°—S0° progredien- 
tibus rectis sursum deviter incurvis vel subflexuosis in nerve intramarginalem @-5—0-9 mm 
a margine distantem concurrentibus, Flores in paniculis umbellarum 3-florarum axillartbus vel 
lateralibus dispositi, ramis ramulisque brevibus crassique; pedicelli 34mm longi, + 3 mm 
crassi. Alabastri ellipsoideo-obovoidei acuminati, 1—cotati, punctulati, circa 12-13 mm longi, 
7-8 mm lati; operculum duplex, late subconicum breviter acuminatum, rugulosum, nitidutum, 
circumcissum, calycis tubum < adaequans et eo aequilatum. Stamina omnia fertitlia, 
exteriora circa IS mm longa: antherae versatiles, obovato-oblongae, celfulis parallelis per 
totam longitudinem rima dehiscentibus, glandula dorsali magna praeditae. Fructus suburceolati 
lignosi, verrucosi (an semper?) breviter pedicelati, circa 2cm longi ef 1-6 cm lati, ore 0-8 mm 
crassi; capsula profunde inclusa 3-valvis. Semina fertilia irregulariter ovata, compressa, nec 
marginata nec alata. 


Large tree with many depressions on trunk, bark smooth, deciduous 
+: maculate; branchlets acutely angled = square. Juvenile leaves about 10 all 
alternate, with long petioles, sparsely setose, ovate, 1-2 upper ones sometimes 
peltate, discolorous, having 4 or more equal lateral veins. Intermediate leaves 
alternate; somewhat petiolate, at the most the lowest 1-2 peltate, oblong, ovate 
or ovate lanceolate “= caudate-acuminate, glabrous, green, many veined, rigid 
to 30cm long and 15cm wide, upper ones =: concolorous. Adult leaves 
alternate, petiolate, glabrous, very rarely discolorous; petiole robust 1-2-5 cm long; 
lamina lanceolate acuminate, slightly falcate or almost straight, 16-28 cm long, 
2°7-4-5em wide 5-7 times long as wide, veins 45-55 on each side of the 
midvein at an angle of 35—S0", straight, below slightly incurved or subflexuose 
concurrent with the intramarginal vein at a distance of 0:5—0:9 mm from the 
margin. Fiewers in panicle of 3—flowered umbels, axillary or laterally arranged, 
branches and branchlets short and thick; pedicels 3-4 mm long + 3 mm thick. 
Flower buds ellipsoid-obovoid, acuminate, single ribbed, punctulate, about 12— 
13mm long, 7-8mm wide; operculum double, broadly subconical, shortly 
acuminate, ruguiose, shiny, circumciss, the calyx tube +=: equal to it and equally 
wide. Stamens all fertile, outside ones about 15 mm long; anthers versatile, 
obovate-oblong, cells parallel dihiscing by splitting the total length, each with 
a large dorsal gland. Fruit suburceolate, woody, verrucose, shortly pedicellate 
about 2 cm long and 1-6¢m wide, rim 0-8 mm thick; capsule with three valves 
deeply included. Fertile seed irregularly ovate, compressed without margins or 
wings. 


Type: Stafford near Brisbane, 8 Jan 1956, S. T. Blake 19889 (BRI, holo: 
NSW, FRI, CANB, K, iso) : 


Queensland, Moreton District: Parish of Bunya, Massie 17; Stafford, in 1953 
Blake 19233; near Gold Creek, Feb 1956, Srevens; near Goodna, Aug 1942 Richards 
(hb. Forestry School, Canberra), in 1953, Henry; Mt Gravatt, Aug 1926, White 926: 
Kuraby, Jan 1922, White; Brisbane, cultivated seedlings, Mar 1954, Blake 19252. 


5 


All the localities are within or close to the boundary of the City of Greater 
Brisbane, but I have seen from the train trees of what appears to be the 
same species southward from Brisbane almost to Grafton, New South Wales. 
It is a constituent of Eucalyptus forest on stony or shallow soil and has been 
regarded as a broad-leaved form of EF. maculata Hook., a species widely spread 
in SE Queensland in similar habitats. These two species resemble one another 
in bark, but the much larger leaves of FE. henryi give to the crown a heavier 
and denser appearance: Herbarium specimens are coarser in every way, ‘The 
operculum is almost or quite as long as the calyx-tube and about as wide 
as it instead of decidedly shorter and broader as in E. maculata while the whole 
bud bears a narrow rib or angle from pedicel to the tip of the operculum. 
Young plants of the new species are very different from those of FE. maculata 
and &. citriodora. Seedlings of the latter two are strongly setose with leaves 
that are peltate except for the first few, the peltate setose leaves being rather 
numerous and found also on coppice growth and reversion shoots on mature 
trees. On seedlings of E. Aenryi peltate leaves are rare, the scanty bristles 
soon disappear, and the relatively enormous stiff intermediate leaves are very 
characteristic of older seedlings and coppice shoots; growth is also very slow 
compared with the others. In the adult leaves, the angle of divergence of 
the lateral veins is slightly wider in E. henry’. The latter is figured under 
FE. maculata in Maiden, Crit. Rev. Eucalyptus 5: (1922) pl. 178, figs. 2a-c; 
the buds in 2b are immature. 


E, maculata and E. citriodora resemble each other very closely, much 
more closely than either resembles Z. henryi. On the whole, E. citriodora has 
~ somewhat narrower, rather more acute intermediate leaves, scarcely dimpled 
trunk, and somewhat smaller flowers with relatively slender pedicels as long 
or as longer than the calyx-tube. They were placed in the Corymbosae- 
Peltatae by Blakely, but with /. henryi they differ from the Corymbosae as 
defined by me in Aust. J. Bot. 1: 229-30 (1953) by the alternate juvenile 
leaves, the less regular lateral veins of the adult leaves at a more acute angle 
to the midrib, axillary (not terminal) panicles, few (not several) flowers in 
each umbel, and sharply circumciss opercula. The usually complete absence 
of opposite leaves from the seedlings is noteworthy, but a single pair following 
the cotyledons is sometimes found; I have not been able to find 4—5 pairs in 
&. citriodora as described by Maiden, op, cit, 8; 184 (1933) and Blakely Key, 
Eucalyptus 93 (1934), nor the 5—6 pairs for &. maculata described by Blakely 
on p, 94, Maiden, /.c., Col. Pl. 4-5, figs 29a, 30, 31, figured no opposite 
leaves on either species. From the examples seen, there is a tendency in 
E, maculata for the early juvenile leaves to be broader on seedlings raised 
from seed from southern New South Wales and Victoria than those seedlings 
from seed from northern New South Wales and Queensland. 


My interest in &. henryi was roused by the field observations of Mr, N. 
Henry of the Queensland Department of Forestry. Thanks to him and other 
officers of this department, much more material of the group became available 
for the study, including nursery-raised seedlings of the three species, The 
fine series of seedlings preserved at the Australian Forestry School referred 
to above demonstrate the range of variability in E. maculata. E. henryi is also 
represented, 


6 


Eucalyptus melanoleuca S. T. Blake; species nova affinis E. paniculatae Sm., 
sed floribus fructibusque minoribus, operculo quam calycis tubo 
multo breviore, capsulae valvis profunde inclusis, foliis fere concoloribus 
juvenilibus angustioribus subsessilibus distinguenda. Typus: Blake 
18975. 


Arbor usque ad 30 m alta trunco ramisque majoribus cortice atro duro crasso aspero 
profunde sulcato obtectis, ramis minoribus ramulisque albidis laevibusque; ramuli primo 
angulosi mox subteretes, Folia juvenilia per paria circa 5 opposita, sessilia vel brevissime 
peticlata, lanceolata, discoloria, glabra, margine ct crenulata circa 3:5~Scm_ longa, 
0-5—-0-9cem lata. Folia intermedia alterna, breviter peticlata, ovata, usque ad [0cm 
longa et 4cm lata. Folia adnita dissita, longe petiolata, leviter discoloria, glabra, marginibus 
interdum angustissime recurvis saepius c+ crenulata; petiolus tenuis 1-2-2:3cm longus; 
lamina lanceolata, sensim acute acuminata, -+ falcata plerumque circa 8-15 cm _ longa, 
1-5-2-5 cm lata, plerumque 4~7-S—ies longior quam lata, nervis lateralibus haud conspicuis 
{5-18 utrinsecus costam ex angulo 40-45° progredientibus, nervo intra-marginali 
0.5—[-[mm a margine distanti, Inflorescentia paniculata terminalis vel interdum 
subterminalis, foliis multo brevior; umbellae plerumque 4-6~florae; pedicilli sub flore 
angulosi valde compressi, circa 2~5 mm longi, sub fructu minus compressi circa 2—3+S mm 
longi. Alabastri subobovoidei in pedicellum sensim attenuati, 2—3-costati, circa 5-6 mm 
longi, circa 3-3-5 mm lati; operculum conicum acutum calyeis tubo fere obconico subduplo 
brevius et eo angustius. Stamina usque 4mm longa, exteriora plura ad filamenta subulata 
redacta; antherae subcuneatac, truncatae, ad apicem filamenti oblique affixae, apice poris 
dehiscentes, haud  gplanduligerae. Fructus truncato-obovoidei in pedicello  attenuati, 
+ 2~3-costulati, rugulosi, circa 5—~6mm longa 4-5 mm lata, oris margine plani circa 
0-7 mm crassi disco obscuro; valvae capsulae pro more 4 profunde inclusae, Semina 
fertilia nigerbrunnea polyhedra vel subovata, compressa, tenuissime reticulata vix striolata, 
J~1-4mm longa, 0-8~1-05 mm lata; semina sterilia multo minora pallidioraque, polymorpha, 
angulata, 


Tree up to about 30m tall with trunk and larger branches covered with 
black, persistent, thick, rough, deeply furrowed bark; smaller branches and 
branchlets white and smooth; branchlets at first angular soon subterete. Juvenile 
foliage for about 5 pairs opposite, sessile or very shortly petiolate lanceolate 
discolorous, glabrous, with margin + crenulate, about 3-5—5 cm long, 0-5-0-9 
cm wide. Intermediate foliage alternate, shortly petiolate, ovate to 10 cm long and 
4cem wide, Adult foliage well spaced with long petioles, slightly discolorous, glab- 
rous, margins sometimes very narrowly recurved often = crenulate; petioles thin, 
1-2—2+3 cm long; lamina lanceolate, acuminate + falcate usually about 8-15 cm 
long, 1:5-2:5 cm wide, usually 4-7-5 times longer than wide, primary veins not 
conspicuous, 15~18 on each side of the midvein at an angle of 40--45°; intra- 
marginal vein 0-5—1-1 mm in from the margin. Inflorescence paniculate terminal 
or sometimes subterminal, leaves much shorter, umbels usually 4—6 flowered; 
pedicels strongly compressed and angled below the flowers, about 2-5 mm long, 
less compressed below the fruit 2—-3:5 mm long. Flower buds subobovoid gradually 
attenuated into the pedicel, 2~3 ribbed, about 5-6mm long; about 3—3:5 mm 
wide; operculum conical, acute, calyx tube almost obconical, less than half as 
long and narrower than the operculum. Stamens up to 4mm long, many outside 
filaments reduced to fine point; anthers subcuneate, truncate, attached obliquely 
to the top of the filament dehiscing by apical pore, without glands. Fruit truncate- 
obovoid on slender pedicels -- 2-3 ribbed, rugulose, about 5-6mm_ long 
4.5mm wide margin flat about 0-7 mm thick, disc obscure; capsule usually 
with 4 valves deeply included. Fertile seed dark brown, many sided or sub-ovate, 
compressed, finely reticulate rarely with fine linear markings 1—1-4 mm long, 
0-8-1-5mm wide; sterile seeds much smaller and paler, variable in shape, 
angular. 


Type: 6—7 miles N of Yarraman, Jul 1952, Blake 18975 (BRI, holo; CANB, 
NSW, FRI, K, iso) 


7 


Queensland, Burnett District: Nanango, -: 390m, May 1940, Blake 14202, Moreton 
District: Cooyar Range, 6-7 miles N of Yarraman, + 435m, July 1952 Blake 189735; 
Yarraman, Sep 1924, Cameron Y45. 


This ironbark belongs in Blakely’s section Terminales and is most closely 
allied to E. paniculata 5m. from New South Wales from which it differs as given 
in the diagnosis above. The smooth white bark of the smaller branches is in 
strong contrast with the black deeply furrowed bark on the rest of the tree 
and this contrast with the dense dark green crown fairly readily distinguishes 
the species in the field. E. decorticans (F. M. Bail.) Maiden and E. sideraxyion 
A. Cunn. ex Maiden are other ironbarks in the area with smooth upper branches; 
the former has all or most of the branches white, FE. siderexylon has duller, less 
conspicuous smooth branches, while both have much larger buds and fruits and 
narrow juvenile and intermediate leaves. Most of the leaves of E. melanoleuca 
have somewhat undulate to distinctly crenulate margins, but some of the crenula- 
tions are the result of insect damage; if this margin is a regular feature of 
undamaged leaves, it will provide a useful diagnostic character. 


A few stands of the species are to be found near Yarraman and, according 
to Cameron, it is found in rain-forest margins. It is also associated with other 
species of Eucalyptus in open forest. 


The species epithet refers to the strongly contrasted black and white bark. 


Eucalyptus urophylla S. T. Blake, species nova affins E. albae Reinw. ex Blume 
sed cortici persistenti aspero rimoso squamoso-fibroso et  foliis 


dorsiventralibus valde discoloribus supra sine stomatibus differt. Typus: 
Turnbull 210 (FRI, holotypus) 


Arbor altitudinem fere 50m altigens trunco + excurrente. Cortex saltem in trunco 
saepissime persistens asper rimosus squamoso-fibrosus, badius vel griseus in ramulis saepe 
etiam in rami raro etiam in parte trunco deciduis, laevis griseus in lamellis longis decorticans. 
Ramuli angulati. Folia dissita dorsiventralia valde discoloria longe petiolata: petioli supra 
sulcati pro more 1.2~3.cm longis et pro more 2-3 laminae latitudinis aequantes; laminae 
rectae vel leviter falcatae vulgo anguste utique angustissime ovatae interdum ovatac, caudato- 
acuminatae, basi cuneatae interdum obliquae, aetate -: coriaceae, maginibus leviter incrassatis 
leviter recurvis, supra saturate virides nitides sine stomatibus, infra multo pallidae opacae, 
untrique dense ‘punticulatae; pro more 7-20 cm longae acumine longo incluso 0,7—3 cm iatae, 
sine acumine circa (2—)3—6—plo longiores quam latiores; vena intra marginalis tenius a 
margine circa 06-1. mm distans; venis lateribus primaris tenuibus fere rectis plerumque 
subparallelis utrisectus costae 16-18 sub angulis plerumque 45°-65° abeutibus. Umbella in 
axillis superiores situs, solitaria, 5-8 floribus; pedunculus rectus vei fere rectus, compressus 
+ ancipitius, basem versus -: tenuem sursum dilatatus, 8-22 mm longus; pedicelli angulati 
+ compressi sub fructibus vix mutati, 4-10mm longi. Alabastra ellipsoidea vel admodum 
obovoidea breviter acuminata vel apiculata vel rotundata teretia in pedicellos abrupte 
discinentes, 10-14mm longa, 6-10mm lata, saepe conspicue punctata; calycis tubus —& 
cyathiformis supra ovarinm valde productum equans longus et latus vel sapius paullo 
brevior quam latus; operculum calycis tubum subaequilongum vel paullo longius, et distinete 
latius. Stamina omnia fertilia exteriores 6—8 mm longa: anthera versatiles obovato-oblongae 
cellulis parallelis in rimis longitudinalibus omnino dehiscentibus; glans magna ellipsoida 
dorsalis. Ovarium omnino inferum apice leviter convexo. Fructus a pedicello bene distincto, 
cyathiformis =: obconicus aeque longus et latus vel paulo brevior quam fatior, valvis 
exclusis 6-10 mm longus 7-12 mm latus, saltem supra medium pro more ecostatis fere 
laevis, pariete externo saepius subtenui ef margine acuto, raro margine usque lato interne 
descendente disco inconspicuo; operculi cicatrix leviter depressa usque 2mm lata; capsula 
3-4 loculata; valvae -++ inclusa vel partem exserta, Semina fertila anrbitu irregulariter 4-6 
anglati vel c+ semicirculari, tugida vel irregulariter compressa, marginibus alarum <b 
rotundatis, alais acutis margine obscure denticulato, faciebus tenuiter striatis et trabeculatis 
+ 1:1~1-5 mm longo 0-81 mm lato; hilum parvum subbasale. Plantulae glabrae; lignotuber 
pravum vel 0; cotyledons circa duplo latiores quam longiores fere and medium bilobae; 
folia in paria circa 6~7 dispostia, anguste elliptica-oblonga vel elliptica usque anguste ovata 
obtusa, cuneata conspicuo petiolata, discoloria, Folia juvenilia glabra, subopposita, ovata 
vel admodum elliptica, acuta interdum apiculata vel brevissime acuminate circa 6-5 X 3.5 
~ 15 & 55cm, 


8 


| Tree attaining height of about 50m, trunk more or less excurrent. Bark 
at least on the trunk usually persistent, rough, fissured, scaly-fibrous, reddish 
brown or pearl grey; deciduous on the small branches and rarely on part of the 
trunk; smooth, grey decorticating in long strips. Stems angular. Leaves dorsi- 
ventral ‘and well spaced, markedly discolorous and with long petioles, Petioles 
grooved above, usually 1-2-3em long and usually 2-4 of the width of the 
leaf. Lamina straight or slightly falcate, commonly narrow or very narrowly 
ovate, sometimes ovate, caudate acuminate, cuneate at the base sometimes 
oblique, coriaceous when mature with slightly thickened and recurved margins, 
shining deep green and without stomates above, markedly duller and paler 
below, densely punctate on both sides, usually 7~20 cm long including tapering 
point 0-7-3em long, 0-7-3.cm wide; without the point about (2)—3-6 times 
longer than wide with a fine intramarginal vein about 0-6-1 mm from leaf 
margin and 16-28 fine almost straight and parallel primary lateral veins on each 
side of the midrib usually making an angle of about 45°--65°. Inflorescence a 
single umbel with 5-8 flowers above the axil on a straight or nearly straight, 
compressed -—- two angled peduncle 8-22 mm long usually slender at the base 
and broadened upwards. Pedicels angular, =: compressed 4-10 mm long, nearly 
uniform below fruit. Flower buds ellipsoid or fully obovoid, shortly acuminate, 
apiculate or rotund, terete, abruptly contracted into the pedicel, 10-14 mm 
long, 6-10 mm wide, often conspicuously punctate. Calyx tube -+ cyathiform, 
strongly elongated above the ovary, uniformly as long as wide or more often a 
little shorter than wide. Operculum about equal or slightly longer than the 
calyx tube and distinctly wider than it. Stamens 6-8 mm long, all the outer ones 
fertile; anthers versatile, obovate to oblong; cells parallel with longitudinal 
grooves, all dehiscent; glands large, ellipsoid, dorsal, Ovary always inferior, 
apex slightly convex. Fruit easily distinguished from pedicel, cyathiform or == 
obconie as long as wide or a little shorter than wide excluding the valves, 6-10 
mm long, 7-12 mm wide, always without ribs above the middle, nearly smooth, 
mostly with relatively thin walls and a thin acute or rarely wide rim depressed 
inwards; disc inconspicuous; operculum scar slightly depressed all round, 2 mm 
wide; capsule 3—4 loculi; valves =: included or partly exserted. Fertile seeds 
irregular in outline, 4-6 angulate or =: semicircular, turgid or irregularly com- 
pressed, margins of the wing + round; wings acute with the margins = 
obscurely denticulate faces finely striated and cross hatched 1-1-1:45 mm 
long, 0-8-1 mm wide; hilum small, subbasal. Seedling glabrous; lignotuber 
small or none; cotyledons about twice as wide as long, usually bilobed about 
the centre; leaves arranged in pairs for about 6-7, narrowly elliptically oblong 
or elliptical to narrowly ovata, obtuse, cuneate, conspicuously petiolate, discal- 
orous, Juvenile foliage glabrous, subopposite, ovate or fully elliptical, acute, 
sometimes apiculate or very shortly acuminate about (6-5 & 3-5)—(15 & 5:5) cm. 


Type: Timor: 20-:8km S$ of Dili on road to Maubisse, 8°38’S 125°37’E, 
Aug 1971, Turnbull 210 (FRI, holotype). 


Habitat: On the mountains usually above 500m of the Indonesian Islands 
of Timor, Wetar, Flores, Lamblem and Alar. Sced has been distributed under the 
names of Eucalyptus ‘decaisneana’ and Eucalyptus ‘alba’ for cultivation mainly 
as a timber source to many parts of the tropical world. 


Timor: Bioba, + 1400m, Mar 1939, Bloembergen 33; Eban, -: 800m, Mar 1924, 
Therik 15; Koeamoea, + 800m, Mar 1924, Fangidoe 3; 5km W of Eban, N of Soe, 1230 
m, Aug 1968, Larsen 32; Moetis Ra., Fatoe Emnasi Forest Reserve, + 1400m, Apr 1937, 
de Grijp (4 sheets); Fatoe Emnasi, + 1500 m, Feb 1938, Afas Nasiran 7; Kipeana 
+ 1300 m, Mar 1939, Bloembergen 37, 37a: Mar 1939, Bloembergen 38, 38a, 38b, 39: 
Bisila 1200 m, Sep 1933, Damanoe 25; Hole Kenoetoe, + 1000m, Mar 1939, Bloembergen 
40; Saoe, 1020 m, Feb 1927, Toengea; ca 10km from Ermera towards Bobenaro, 1140 m, 


9 


Jul 1963, Larsen: ca 35km from Dili towards Ermera, 540m, Aug 1968, Larsen 39; 
near Dili, 480m, July 1963, Jacobs Til, 12 km from Dili towards Maubisse, 600m, Jul 
1968, Larsen 11 and 18; 14 km from Dili towards Maubisse, 720 m, Jul 1968, Larsen 14; 
2ikm from Dili towards Maubisse, 960m, Jul 1968, Zarsen 15; 25 km from Dili towards 
Maubisse, 1140 m, Jul 1968, Larsen 16; 36 km from Dili towards Maubisse, 1140m, Jul 
1968, Larsen 17; 28km from Dili towards Maubisse, 960m, Jul 1968, Larsen 2; 
ca 35—40km from Dili. towards Maubisse, 1200m, Jul {968, Larsen 4; $ of Dili near 
Aileu, 900m, Jul 1963, Jacobs T9; near Aileu, 660m, Jul 1963, Jacobs T10; between Aileu 
and Maubisse, 1200m, Jul 1963, Jacobs T14; near (N of) Maubisse, 1200 m, July 1963, 
Jacobs T8; Maubisse on road to Turiscat, 1410m, Jul 1968, Larsen 7; divide between 
Maubisse Turiscai, N facing slope, 1800 m, Jul 1963, Jacobs T2; Turisca, 1530 m, Jul 1963, 
Jacobs T1; near (SW of) Maubisse, 1800 m, Jul 1963, Jacobs T6; near Hato, about SW of 
Maubisse towards Ainaro’ 2100m, Jul 1963, Jacobs TS; Mt Tatamailu, ca 2400 m, 
Jan 1954, van Steenis 18434, 18435; Mt Tatamailu, 2600m, Jan 1954, van Steenis 
18436; Mt Tatamailu, 2800 m, Jan 1954, van Steenis 18410, 18430, 18488; Mt Tatamailu, 
ca 2900m, Jan 1954, van Steenis 18455; Mt Tatamailu, summit 2950m, Jan 1954, van 
Steenis 18462; above halfway between Maubisse and Betano 1380 m, Jul 1963, Jacobs T4; 
Mt Mundo Perdido, ascent from Ossu 700-1000 m, Dec 1953, van Steenis 18242, Wetar. 
Laroe Leng Forest, 1000 m, Jul 1924, Sastrodihardjo 13, 14; Kali M. Lerai, N of Ilwaki 
900m, Apr 1939, Bloentbergen 110 and 112. Flores. Mt Lewu Tobi, Hokeng, 420 m, 
Jul 1968, Larsen 30; Maumere, Egon Mins, 600m, Sep 1936, de Voigd 2804, 2805, Oct 
1936, de voigd 1 and 2; Mt Egon, + 1703 m, Jun 1923, Sastrodihaidjo 8; Leivowerang, 
ae 700m, Feb 1927, Djawa 123; Mt Larantoeha, Teijsmann HB. 7952. Lomblem. Leivo 
Lera, ~ 600m, Jun 1924, Sastrodihardjo 4: Leve Wehe; + 940 m, Jun 1924, Sastrodihardjo 
5. Alor, Kaka, + 500 m, Aug 1924, Sastrodihardjo 32; Pido, 1350 m, Jul 1924, Sastro- 
dihardjo 27; Sigeker, 1100 m, Feb 1922, Sastredihardjo 25; Bare, 960 m, Aug 1924, 
Sastrodiftardjo 30. 


Cultivated Plants. Malaya: Cameron Highlands, 1410 m, June 1953, Tapalt in Kepong 
FN 69452. Sumatra: Tapiannoelli, 10km N of Siborong, 1100m, Sep 1931, Huitema 133. 
Bogor: Garoet, Leuiviliang, Jan 1939, Kartaatmadia Ja 4681. Celebes: Makassar, Nasiran. 
Flores: 34 km E of Ende, 660 m, Jul 1968, Larsen 28. 


FE. urophylla differs from FE. alba Reinw. ex BI. in that the trees are mostly 
straight with a <& excurrent trunk, brown fissile wood, rough persistent bark, 
more angular twigs with shorter internodes, narrow caudate acuminate often 
-+& falcate discolorous leaves with stomata restricted to the lower surface, shorter 
petioles, smaller -£ elliptic coppice leaves and on the whole a thinner, sharper 
rim to the fruit and more deeply inserted valves. 


In the middle part of its altitudinal range on Timor, the rough bark tends to 
extend well into the crown with only the smailer twigs having smooth deciduous 
bark. In the upper altitudes about 2000 m and upwards there seems to be a 
strong tendency for the smooth bark to extend to the larger branches and even 
to the trunk itself. These “half barked” trees as they would be somewhat 
fancifully called in Australia are also found where the two species meet and 
sometimes as strays well below the usual lower limits of the range-—in other words 
in more extreme habitats. These trees have acquired distinctive local names and 
have been presumed that they are hybrids between the two species. Hybrids 
undoubtedly occur and at least some of them are intermediate in growth form 
and timber as well as having leaves +: intermediate in form, faintly discolourous, 
stomata on both surfaces but definitely fewer on the upper surface. Bloembergen 
38 (bb 27094—5) from a “half barked” tree has leaves, buds, flowers and fruit 
much more like the general run of F. urephylia (and with stomata restricted to the 
lower surface of the leaf} than his 37—37a (bb 27092; 27093) without fruit from 
an entirely rough barked tree which has unusually narrow leaves and unusuaily 
small buds and flowers. His 31 (bb 27084) from another “half barked” tree 
with leaves with about 4 of the somata on the upper surface and surely represents 
a hybrid. 


On Flores it appears that there is a strong tendency for the smooth bark to 
extend over the whole tree. 


Austrobaileya 1 (1): 11-12 (1977) 


MISCELLANEOUS NOTES ON AUSTRALIAN 
PTERIDOPHYTES. I. 


By S. B. ANDREWS 


Queensland Herbarium, Brisbane 


Blechnum articulatum (F. Muell.) S$. B. Andrews, comb. nov. Based on Lomaria 
articulata F, Muell., Fragm. 5:187 (1866). Type: Queensland, Head 
of Mackay River (Tully River), Dallachy, MEL 59536 (seen). 


Mueller first described the Queensland fern Lomaria articulata, distinguishing 
it from Lomaria euphlebia Kunze. The latter is now correctly known as Plagio- 
gyria euphlebia (Kunze) Mett. but the former is a species of Blechnum as pointed 
out by E. B. Copeland in his Ferns of Fiji: 58 (1929), See also Philip. J. Sci. 
38:384 (1929). Baker, in Synopsis Filicum: 183 (1868), combined the two 
under Lomaria euphlebia and he was followed by various authors including 
F, M. Bailey in Lith. Ferns Qd: 87 (1892) and Od Flora: 1965 (1902), 
C. Christensen in Index Filicum: 495 (1906) and Domin in Bibl. Bot. 85:147 
(1913), each combined them under Plagiogyria euphlebia. Subsequently in 
Suppl. 3 of the Index Filicum the combination Plagiogyria articulata (F. Muell.) 
Ching was made, deleting the name of the Queensland fern as a synonym of 
P, euphlebia. 


Professor R. E, Holttum kindly located Mueller’s specimen of Lomaria 
articulata, at Kew, bearing Ching’s label Plagiogyria articuiata. In a personal 
communication he states “This is the origin of the reference to Plagiogyria; it was 
simply reported to Christensen who entered it with Ching’s name in the third 
Supplement of Index Filicum; there is nothing else published about the transfer.”. 
He continues, “The specimen most certainly represents a species of Blechnum 
(Lomaria). It has exactly the indusia of Lomaria and also similar sporangia; 
spores are monolete and smooth; perhaps they are young’. I found the spores 
on mature plants to be verrucate, 


I have examined the holotype and other specimens kindly sent on loan by 
the Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens and National Herbarium, Melbourne 
in addition to specimens held in the Queensland Herbarium. 


A description will be included in the forthcoming Handbook to the Ferns 
and Fern-allies of Queensland, 


Christella subpubescens (B1.) Holtt. ‘Keffordii’? comb. nov. Based on 
Aspidium molle Sw. forma keffordii F. M. Bail., Qd Agric. J, 20:242 
(1908). 
Aspidium truncatum (Poir, in Lam.) Gaud. var. keffordii (F. M. Bail.) 
F. M. Bail., Compreh. Cat. Qd PL: 645 (1913). 

I have examined the type of the above and found it to belong to Christella 
subpubescens (Bl.) Holtt. It is not a forma or variety in the sense of the 
International Code of Botanical Nomenclature but rather a cultivar, although 
collected in the wild. 

B 


12 


As a preliminary to the publication of a checklist and handbook of the ferns 
and fern-allies of Queensland, the following new combinations are made. 


Crypsinus simplicissimus (F. Muell.) S, B. Andrews, comb. nov. Based on 
Polypodium simplicissimum F, Muell., Fragm. 7:120 (1870); 156 (1871). 
Type: Queensland, mountains near Rockingham Bay, J. Dallachy (not 
seen), 


Ctenopteris fuscopilosa (F. Muell, & Bak.) S. B. Andrews, comb. nov. Based on 


Polypodium fuscopilosum F, Muell. & Bak., J. Bot. 163 (1887). Type: 
Queensland: Bellenden Ker Range, Sayers & Davidson (not seen). 


Ctenopteris gordonii (Watts) $. B. Andrews, comb. nov. Based on 
Polypodium gordonii Watts, Proc. Linn, Soc, N.S.W, 39:792 (1915). 
Type: Queensland: Tully Falls, Watts & Gordon (not seen), Isotypes 
BRI 182219, BRI 114724 (seen). 


Ctenopteris maidenii (Watts) S. B. Andrews, comb. nov. Based on 


Polypodium maidenii Watts, Proc. Linn. Soc. N.S.W. 39:793 (1915). 
Type: Queensland: Evelyn Scrub, R. F. Wailer (not seen). 


Ctenopteris walleri (Maiden & Betche) S. B, Andrews, comb. nov. Based on 


Polypodium walleri Maiden & Betche, Proc. Linn. Soc. N.S.W. 35:799 
(1910). Type: Queensland: Herberton District, F. Waller (not seen). 
Isotype: BRI 182218 (seen), 


Microsorum superficiale (B1.) Ching var. australiense (F, M. Bail.) S. B. Andrews, 
comb. nov. Based on 


Polypodium superficiale BI. var, australiense F. M. Bail, Qd Bull. 13 
(Bot. Bull. 4) 21 (1891). Type: Queensland: Atherton, C. J. Wild 
BRI 182653 (seen). 


Oenotrichia dissecta (C. T. White & D. A. Goy) S. B. Andrews, comb. nov. 
Based on 


Leptolepia dissecta C, T. White & D. A. Goy. Vict. Nat. 54:149 (1938), 
Type: Queensland, Mt. Spurgeon. C. T. White BRI 26561 (seen). 


The above combination was listed in Check List N. Od Ferns, N. Qd Nat. 
Club, Publ. No. 3:5 (1946). There is no indication there that a new combination 
was intended or of the name(s) of the author(s} making the change. There is no 
reference to the basionym or place of publication of a description or diagnosis of 
the fern. It seems to me very doubtful that the new combination was validly 
published in the place cited (or anywhere else as far as I can trace) and therefore 
make it above, 


Pteridium semihastatum (Wall. ex Ag.) S. B. Andrews, comb. nov. Based on 


Pteris semihastaia Wall., List: no. 102 (1829), nomen nudum; Agardh, 
Rec, Pterid. 48 (1839). Type: Singapore (not seen). 


Austrobaileya 1 (1): 13~22 (1977) 


NOTES ON SOLANUM (SOLANACEAE) IN AUSTRALIA 


By R. J. F. Henderson 


Queensland Herbarium, Brisbane 


Summary 


Solanum callium sp. nov. (2n==48) occurs in north eastern New South Wales and south 
eastern Queensland. Typification of S. villosunt Miller, S. americanteun Miller and S. gracile 
Dunal is discussed. 


Solanum callium C,. T. White ex R. J. F. Henderson, species nova $. super- 
ficienti Adelbert affinis sed floribus paucioribus magnioribus, in inflorescentia 
supra-axillari portatibus, fructibus magnioribus in pedicellos longiores nutantes 
portatibus, foliis papyraceis tenuioribus differt. Typus: 28° 27'S, 152° 42’E; ca 
35 km NW of Kyogle, New South Wales, Dec 1968, Henderson H489 (lowers) 
(holotypus BRI 178893, isotypus BRI 178894, isotypi distribuendi K, NSW, 
CANB); 28° 18S, 152° 5B, Levers Plateau, QId/N.S.W. border, ca 90 km SSW 
of Brisbane, Apr 1972, Henderson H1289 (fruits) (paratypi BRI 198961/2, 
isoparatypi distribuendi K, NSW, CANB). 


Frutex inermis, usque ad 5m altus; caules glabri usque ad 3cm diam. Folia solitaria 
vel aliquando bina (ubi subaequalia vel disparia), anguste lanceolata vel anguste elliptica, 
utrinque opacoviridia sed subtus leviter pallidiora; in planta viva textura papyracea, margine 
++ undulata, et nervis lateralibus subtus elevatis, in speciminibus siccis textura tenuiter 
papyracea (paene membranacea ) et nervis praecipuis tenuibus et + wutrinque similibus; 
apice acuta, basi cuneata in petiolum angustata; supra glabra, infra glabra praeter pilis simplis 
paucis secus costam ef venas principales vel tantum in junectura costae venis primatiis vel 
omnino decalvata, guitis numerosis minutis -&t elevatis opacis saepe praeditis; lamina 
(2°5—-)}8~16(—23°5) om longa, (1°3~-)3-6(-8:5) com data; petiolus 0-5-4 cm longus. -Inflores- 
centiae supra-axillares, cincinnorum simplicium (vel raro compositorum ordinis primt), 
floribus ca 9(—15 vel ~30 wbi pedunculum furcatum) sed flores plerumaque cadentes cicatvices 
conspictiae pedunculis relinguentes; pedunculi simplices (vel raro 1-furcati) erecti vel 
ascendentes, 0-5—1 cm longi ad florescentia in fructo usque ad 3cm longi; rhachis recurva, 
internodiis condensatis; pedicelli usque ad icm, usque ad 3cm longi post florescentiam 
elongati et in fructo nutantes, expansi abrupte apicem versus sed subtus fructum -& constricti. 
Calyces ad florescentia campanulati, in fructo apptanati fructus subtendentes; tubus brevis, 
ca 2mm longus; lebi -- semicirculares, obtuse, 0:4—l1.mm longi, 1:4—-1:6.mm lati. Corollae 
albae; tubus 2—3 mm longus; lobi ovati-lanceolati, venatione reticulata. conspicua, acuti, ca 
5-7 mm longi, 3~4mm lati, glabri, aliquantum coriacei, apicem versus cucullati papillosi. 
Ovarium glabrum, stylus rectus, 5~6mm longus, 2~3-5mm antheras excedens. Stamina 
3—4 mm longa; antherae 2:6-3-7.mm longae, atro-aurantiacae, in ambitu ellipticae. Pollina 
(19-)20-24 # diam. Baecae 1~5 in infructescentiis omnis, globosae, atro-aurantiacae, poly- 
spermae, carnosae, aliquantum nitidae, 1-1: 5(—2) cm: diam.: semina oblique reniformia, plana, 
3-4.mm longa, 2~3mm data, straminea. Chromosomatum numerus 2n—48. 


Shrub without prickles, up to 5 metres tall; stems slender, glabrous, up to 
Som diameter, Leaves solitary or sometimes two together (where sub-equal 
or unequal in size), narrowly lanceolate or narrowly elliptic, on both sides dull 
green but slightly paler below, in the living plant thin textured, the margins =: 
undulate and the lateral nerves raised on the undersurface, in dried specimens 
papery textured (almost membranous) with main nerves fine and -£ similar on 
both surfaces; apex acute; base cuneate, drawn out narrowly along the petiole; 


Plate 1. Holotype of So/anum callium C. T. White ex R. J. Henderson. 


15 


upper surface glabrous, lower surface glabrous except for a few simple hairs along- 
side the midrib and principal nerves or only at the junction of midrib and principle 
nerves or becoming completely glabrous, often marked with numerous minute 
ck raised opaque spots; lamina (2-5—-)8-16(—23:5) cm long, (1:3~—)3-6 
(—8:5) cm broad; petiole 0:5—4 cm long. Inflorescences supra-axillary, of simple 
(or rarely first order compound) cincinnal cymes, ca 9 (~15 or —30 when peduncle 
branched)—flowered, but flowers mostly caduous leaving conspicuous scars on the 
rhachis; peduncle simple (or rarely once forked), erect or ascending, 0+5—1 cm 
long in flower, to 3cm long in fruit; rhachis recurved, internodes condensed; 
pedicels to 1 cm in flower, in fruit to 3 cm long, nutant, abruptly thickened towards 
the top but somewhat constricted under the fruit. Calyx in flower campanulate, in 
fruit flattened and subtending the fruit; tube short, ca 2 mm long; lobes + semi- 
circular, obtuse, 0-4--1 mm long, 1-4—1-6 mm broad. Corolla white; tube 2—3 mm 
long; lobes ovate-lanceolate, conspicuously reticulately veined, acute, ca 5-7 mm 
long, 3--4mm broad, glabrous, coriaceous, at the tip cucullate, papillose. Ovary 
glabrous; style straight, 5-6 mm long, exceeding the tips of the anthers by 2—3-5 
mm. Stamens 3-4 mm long; anthers 2:6—3-7 mm long, dark golden yellow, elliptic 
in outline. Pollen (19~)20~24 ,» across. Berries 1-5 in each infructescence, 
globose, orange-yellow, many seeded, fleshy, somewhat shining, 1-1:5(—2) cm 
in diameter; seed obliquely reinform, flat, 3—4 mm long, 2-3 mm across, strami- 
neous. Chromosome number 2n—48. 


This species appears to belong to Solanum subgenus Solanum section 
Leiodendra Dun. (Dunal, Sol. Syn. 20:1816). 


QUEENSLAND. Moreton Distriet: Riverview, Mar 1957, Philp 57/217 (BRI); Levers 
Platean on Qld/N.S.W, border, ca 90 km SSW of Brisbane, Apr 1972, Henderson H1289, 
H1300 (BRI). New Soura Waxes. North Coast: Lismore, Feb 1891, Bauerlen NSW 72067 
(NSW); Alstonville, Nov 1910, Apr 1913, Tomlins NSW 72070, NSW 72071 (NSW); 
Marshall Falls, Alstonville, Dec 1911, Tanner 65 CNSW); Sandiland Ranges, Nov 1904, 
Boorman NSW 72072 (NSW); Toonumbar, near Kyogle, Mar 1944, C. TT. White 12557 
(BRI), Dec 1946, Hayes (BRI); Toonumbar State Forest, Apr 1947, Constable NSW 71565 
(NSW); Whian Whian, near Lismore, Jun 1945, C. 7. White 12855 (BRI), Mar 1966, 
W, T. Jones 3166 (BRI); Mount Giennte slopes, Macpherson Range, Jan 1953, Constable 
(BRI): 28° 27'S, 152° 42’E, ca 20 miles NW of Kyogle, Dec 1968, Feb 1972, Henderson 
H489, H12459 (BRI). 


Specimens from the National Herbarium of New South Wales, Sydney, have 
been examined through the courtesy of the then Director, Mr. K. Mair. They are 
designated by (NSW) in the citations above. 


This species was recognized by C. T. White, a past Government Botanist 
in the Queensland Herbarium, and was tentatively named S. callium and described 
in manuscript by him. The name remained unpublished since his death in 1950 
and only now is published in the light of my researches and promising results 
obtained from chemical analyses carried out on the plant by Prof. J. Swan 
and colleagues at Monash University, Melbourne (Bird ez al., 1976). Though 
the epithet “callium” was proposed by White, the description above is solely 
mine, It is probably derived from the Greek KadAos (Kallos) meaning beauty, 
probably an allusion to the fine stature and appearance of the plant, 


S. callium is very closely related to S. superficiens described from Java and 
southern Sumatra in Indonesia, and when that species is better known, may 
be found to represent only a subspecies of it. I have received on loan through 
the coutesy of the Director, Rijksherbarium, Leiden, the holotype and paratypes 
cited by Adelbert (1948) and three other specimens subsequently identified 
as S. superficiens but not by Adelbert. These latter three are so different 
from the rest that they appear to be misidentified. 


16 


Henderson. 


J 


ite ex R 


. Wh 


T 


lium C 


A paratype of So/anum cal 


Plate 2 


17 


Of the six type sheets, the holotype (Smith 641) is atypical of the set 
in a number of characteristics (and is noted as such in two instances in the 
protologue by Adelbert), though they all possibly belong to the one species. 
Our plants are morphologically most like the holotype specimen (unfortunately 
only in very young bud and with only two fruits) but differs from it principally in 
the fewer flowers in supra-axillary usually simple cincinnal cymes, in the fruiting 
stage often leaf opposed or at least well away from the leaf axils, the larger 
fruits on longer, pendulous pedicels and the thinner textured leaves. On the 
little evidence available, S. callium may have a different flowering period 
from S. siuperficiens (flowers December—March, fruits February-June in 
S. callium; in buds and: fruits in September in S. superficiens (type)) though 
the geographic distance and differences in latitude separating them perhaps 
make comparisons unwarranted, S. callium seems to differ from S. superficiens 
also in chromosome number. From mitoses in anther tissue (voucher H489, BRI 
178893/4) I have established a somatic chromosome number of 48 in our 
species whereas Gerasimenko and Reznikova (1968) record 2n—24 for 
S. superficiens, However, I have not examined any vouchers for the identity 
of their material grown from seed from Bogor, Java (Vilar accession No. 
36212). 


The similarity of S. callium material to certain specimens of Solanum 
from Mexico and Central America in NSW was pomted out to White by 
the late Mr. R. H. Anderson of the New South Wales National Herbarium. 
This may have accounted for White’s failure to proceed with formal description 
of his material but on examination of the specimens referred to by Anderson, 
I find that though a close similarity does exist with one of them (Pringle 6837 
[NSW 85255] from Barranca near Cuernavaca, Mexico, identified as S. triste 
Jacq. but most likely a specimen of S. nudum H.B.K. ex Dun. or S. antillarum 
O. E. Schulz) our plant differs significantly from it in a number of characters 
especially the fewer larger flowers, the longer anthers with larger pollen grains 
(15-20 » across in Pringle 6837, 19-24 » across in S. callium), the lack of 
branched hairs on the leaves and the glabrous ovary. Our plants fit neither 
description of the above species in D’Arcy’s account of Solanaceae in Panama 
(D’Arcy, 1974) and Dr. D’Arcy, who has seen material of our plant, states 
(in correspondence) that it does not resemble anything he has seen from Central 
or northern South America. Mr. D. Blaxell, who at my request compared 
duplicates of my collections (sent as S. superficiens) in K and ones sent to 
K by C, T. White (as S. calliumn, C. T. White 12855) with holdings of Solanum. 
at BM stated in correspondence that “there is nothing in the BM Carribean 
material which even remotely resembles the S. superficiens from Australia’, 
The type specimen of S. nudum (P, not seen; IDC 6209-2.61 : 1.5) appears 
to have shorter broader more thickly textured leaves and smaller fruit on 
shorter pedicels than in our plant. I have not seen any of the syntypes of 
S. antillarum, 


The origin of S. calliuma remains in some doubt. Because of its 
similarity to S. superficiens and to other species of Solanuni from Central 
America, its relatively restricted distribution and the lack of any seemingly 
closely related Australian species, it might be considered an introduction of 
unknown origin that has been able to persist in certain habitats in northern 
New South Wales and southern Queensland. If this is in fact the case, it may 
have been described previously. On the other hand, where seen in the field, 
S. callitom occurs in small but definite populations, usually only on north-facing 
slopes at altitudes above about 500m, in essentially undisturbed rainforest 
margins and clearings which show few, if any, signs of incursion by naturalized 


18 


weedy species. It seems as much a part of the natural vegetation as the native 
S. aviculare Forst. f, does in such habitats. If introduced, it has not, in the 
three quarters of a century or more it has been here, spread as might be 
expected of a persistent weedy introduction in such habitats with high moisture 
supply, moderate temperatures, fertile soils and abundant available light. 


Its occurrence as late as 1957 at Riverview (presumably in the largely 
settled area between Ipswich and Brisbane where the habitat would be most 
atypical for S. callium) is inexplicable. Uf label data has been correctly inter- 
preted, it may point to the species being introduced. However, cuttings grown 
in the glasshouse and later transplanted outdoors in Brisbane failed to prosper 
and died quite rapidly. | 

The species most likely to be confused with S. callium in Australia are 
S. aviculare Forst. f. and its allies (Cincluding S. vescum F. Muell, and 
S, linearifolium WHerasimenko), S. pseudocapsicum L. and perhaps S. viride 
R.Br. From the former group it is clearly distinguished by its pure white flowers 
and light green entire leaves and stem tips (as opposed to lilac to purple 
flowers and dark green to purplish stems and usually conspicuously lobed 
leaves at least in the first two species). §. viride from North Queensland is 
distinguished from it by the lilac flowers in large usually compound cymes 
with petals always stellate pubescent on the outer surface and the smaller 
pisiform fruit. S$. pseudoecapsicurn, an introduced, widely naturalized species 
with white flowers and orangy-red fruits, is much smaller in stature (in Australia 
rarely attaining more than 1-5m in height) and has only one or two flowers 
per inflorescence each succeeded by a fruit about 1-5 cm across but borne 
on an erect pedicel and subtended by a calyx with subulate lobes. 


Solanum villosum Miller, Gard. Dict. ed. 8 : no. 2 (1768), 


In my recent account of this and related species in Australia (Henderson, 
1974 p. 54), I misquoted details regarding the nomenclatural type of the above 
species, There is a sheet with a specimen of S. villosum in the British Museum 
(Natural History) to which I referred, which carries the following labels:— 
(a) A rectangular label on which is written by an unknown hand “692. Solanum 

officinarum acinis puniceis C.B. 166. 1735”. [C.B. 166=Caspar Bauhin, 

Pinacis Theatri Botanici etc. p. 166, 1623, This specimen 692 was grown 

and collected in 1735, See also Britten, 1913], 

(b) A printed label attached to (a) stating 

“Plants from Chelsea Physick Garden sent to the Royal Society in accordance 

with Sir Hans Sloane’s Deed of Conveyance to the Apothecaries Company 

1722-96,” 

(c) A label on which is printed “Type Specimen” and carrying the following 
handwritten unsigned notation: 

“Solanum officinarum, acinis puniceis of Miller, Chelsea Garden 1735, which 

became Solanum villosum (non L.) Miller Dict. no. 2, 1768”. 

(d) An annotation pencilled in an unknown hand 

Me bs Pay miniatum Bernh. 

Solanum villosum Mill. Dict no, 2!” 

In addition the sheet is stamped “Chelsea Garden” on the reverse. 

This specimen is obviously therefore not from Miller’s herbarium as I stated 
but one of the specimens sent from the Chelsea Physic Garden under Sir Hans 
Sloane’s Deed of Conveyance during Miller’s time there, In spite of this, it need 
not necessarily be excluded from consideration as type of a Miller name as 
Britten (1913) would have all such specimens. 


19 


Dr, W. 'T. Stearn of the British Museum (National History) stated (per. 
comm.) that these specimens are an indication of plants growing in the Chelsea 
Physic Garden during Miller’s curatorship and as such warrant careful con- 
sideration when seeking to typify Miller’s species names (see also Stearn’s 
published comments to Barclay regarding typification of Miller’s Datura names 
(Barclay, 1959) and Stearn, 1972), | 


Miller stated in the preface to the seventh (1759) edition of his Dictionary 
that “. . . here it is but doing Justice to the Work, to observe, that the Descrip- 
tions given of the Plants are not copied from Books, but are taken from Nature. 
The far greater Number are from the growing Plants, which the Author has 
under his Care, and the others are from dried Samples, which are well preserved; 
of which he has, perhaps, as large a Collection as can be found in the Possession 
of any private Person.” There is no reason to doubt that the same applied to 
edition eight and for that matter any of the earlier editions of his Dictionary. 


Thus, nomenclatural types of Miller’s names are specimens (if such exist) 
and not illustrations or plates (or specimens on which these were based) or 
descriptions in the works of other authors. 


Specimens in Miller’s own herbarium are of first consideration for in his 
own (printed) words, these could have been the actual specimens from which 
his descriptions were drawn up, 


Miller’s specimens in the Sloane herbarium are of second consideration for 
these are of plants grown under his care which according to Dandy (p. 167) 
and Britten (p. 134), Sloane stated were “gathered, dryed and fastened by 
Miller”. There is however, no certainty that they formed the basis for the des- 
cription in his dictionaries. 


Of third and perhaps least importance are the Chelsea plants sent at 
Sloane’s direction to the Royal Society during Miller’s time there (i.e, up to no, 
2400 which was transmitted in 1769). There is no guarantee that Miller actually 
saw these particular plants but at least they are of plants grown in the Garden 
under his care which he said formed the principal basis for his descriptions. 


Britten (1913) detailed the history and fate of the Miller herbarium which 
is now housed in the general collection of the British Museum (Natural History). 


With regards typification of S. villostwn, I believe there is no specimen 
labelled as such or as Solanum officinarum, acinis puniceis from the Miller 
herbarium in BM. According to Mr, D. Blaxell, there are no specimens labelled 
with either of the above names in the Sloane Herbarium either, Chelsea plant 
692 above now comes under consideration for typification of S. villosum. It is 
labelled as Solanum officinarum acinis puniceis and was collected in 1735, In 
edition 2 of Miller’s Dictionary (1733), the second species dealt with under 
Solanum was Solanum officinarum acinis puniceis. It seems logical to believe that 
the identification of a Chelsea Garden specimen collected only two years after 
the appearance of the Dictionary would have been correct, It is not discordant 
with the protologue description. 


Strictly speaking this specimen can only be chosen as lectotype if it is cer- 
tain that Miller actually saw the specimen (ICBN: Guide for the Determination 
of Types 4a). Since this will never be known, it is probably more precise to 
designate it as a neotype. I here reaffirm selection of this specimen as type but 
redesignate it neotype. 


20 


Solanum gracile Dunal in DC., Prodromus 13 (1):54 (1852). 


With respect to Australian plants identified as S. gracilius Herter in my 
previous account (Henderson, 1974), typification of Dunal’s S. gracile was 
critical. In my paper, published on 2 September 1974, I nominated a specimen 
grown in the Montpellier Gardens and preserved in the De Candolle herbarium 
as lectotype (IDC 800-61.2063:111.7), In his account of Solanaceae for the 
Flora of Panama, issued on 3 July, 1974, D’Arcy cited as type of S. gracile 
Dunal, “Hort. Monsp. 1831 (MPU)”, without any explanation as to what kind 
of type this specimen was or any discussion on the material. 


In the protologue to S. gracile (excluding S. gracile var. microphyllum) 
Dunal cited five specific herbarium collections (four in “h Mus. Paris’ (=P) 
and one in “h. DC.”), and stated that the species was grown from seed “in hort. 
Monsp. et Genev.” He further stated at the end of the species description that 
he had studied dried material “-in h. DC. h. Mus. Paris-” and had seen living 
plants. Dunal cannot be credited with nominating a holotype (citation of “hort 
Berol. e sem. hort. Monsp”. after the name is merely an indication of the origin 
of the name, a fact which is verified by a note on one of the syntypes in G-DC 
(Henderson, 1974 p. 48)). All specimens cited and referred to in the protologue 
are therefore syntypes. I cannot see that any herbarium material in MPU whether 
collected, labelled or determined by Dunal can strictly qualify for syntype status. 
At best they may be proved to be iso-syntypes. 


The 1972 International Code of Botanical Nomenclature (ICBN)-—~-Guide 
for Determination of Types states under 4a that “a lectotype must be chosen 
from among elements that were definitely studied by the author up to the time 
the name of the taxon was published and included in the protologue”’ (italics 
mine), and under 4c that “. . . If no holotype was designated by the original 
author and if syntypes exist, one of them must be chosen as the lectotype” (see 
also Article 7). 


For these reasons | reject D’Arcy’s citation as an incorrect citation of the 
type of S. gracile Dunal. This may seem trivial since D’Arcy (i.c.) synonymized 
S. gracile Dunal (and S. douglasii Dunal) under S. nigrescens Mart. & Gal. in his 
account. From my experimental work (Henderson, ic.) living plants of S. 
douglasii (as typified by the holotype in G-DC) and those of S. gracilius (=S. 
gracile as typified by my previous lectotypification) are clearly of morphologically 
distinct species and can be distinguished even in the dried state. I have stated 
why I do not accept 5. nigrescens for plants of S. douglasil. 


In addition, D'Arcy (1974b) formally described specimens of plants culti- 
vated in New Zealand, as 8. americanum var. baylisii and indicated that this is 
the taxon that Baylis in 1958 considered was S. gracile Duna!. From his proto- 
logue they appear identical with ones I grew from seed sent from Professor Baylis 
as §. gracile (BRI) which I considered were conspecific with Dunal’s species (as 
Baylis did) and the specimen selected by me as lectotype of S. gracile Dun, The 
characteristics given by D’Arcy to distinguish his variety from S. americanum var. 
americanum are well within the normal range of variation of §. gracilius. J 
therefore treat S, americanum var. baylisii as a synonym of S. gracilius, 


Solanum americanum Miller, Gard. Dict. ed. 8 : no. 5 (1768). 


In my recent account of S. nigrum and related species in Australia, I con- 
sidered Australian plants of $. nodiflorum Jacq, subsp. nodiflorum were taxonom- 
ically. distinct from those of $. americanum as lectotypified by Edmonds (1972). 
My reasons for this were fully explained. 


21 


D’Arcy (1974a, 1974b) apparently ignored Edmond’s lectotypification of 
S. americanum for he cited as type “authentic specimens Herb. Sloane 295, 14”, 
without any discussion or comment. 


The ICBN-Guide for the Determination of Types (1972) states under 4f 
that “the first choice of a lectotype must be followed by subsequent workers unless 
the original material is rediscovered, or unless it can be shown that the choice was 
based upon a misinterpretation of the protologue, or if the choice was made 
arbitrarily (e.g., by a mechanical system) and without understanding of the group 
concerned,” 


From the protologue to S. americanum it is impossible to say conclusively 
that Edmond’s lectotypification was incorrect under any of these categories and 
therefore cannot be set aside. As stated previously the material in Miller’s own 
herbarium is of first consideration in typification of Miller’s names, that in the 
Sloane herbarium is of secondary consideration. I therefore reject D’Arcy’s 
citation of the type as being incorrect. 


Acknowledgements 


I wish to acknowledge the assistance received from Mr. D. F. Blaxell of the 
National Herbarium of New South Wales (NSW) while Australian Botanical 
liaison officer at Kew (K) in 1974/75. Mr. Blaxell compared specimens and 
supplied promptly photecopies of protologues and relevant literature. Mr. D. 
McGillivray, also of NSW, kindly arranged for photocopies of certain protologues 
while Liaison officer at K in 1968/69. Mr. D. Symon (ADW) and Mr, L. 
Pedley (BRI) also kindly compared specimens of S. callin with specimens in 
K at my request and commented on their findings. 


Bibliography 
ADELBERT, A. G, L, (1948), Notes on the Flora of Java 4, B8ftunea 6:310-336. 


Barciay, A. 8. (1959). New Considerations in an old Genus : DATURA. Bol. Mus. 
Leaflets Harvard Oni, 18(6):245-272. 


Biro, G. J., Coriins, D. J., Eastwoop, F. W., GATEHOUSE, B. M. K, C., Jozsa, A. J. & 
SWAN, J. M. (1976). New steroidal Alkaloids from Solanwm callin. Tetrahedron 
Letters no, 40:3653-3656. Pergamon Press: Great Britain. 


Britten, J. (1913). Philip Miller’s Plants. J. Bot, 51:131-135, 
Danby, J. E. (1958). The Sloane Herbarium. London: Trustees of the British Museum. 


TYArcy, W. (1974a) (11973). Solanaceae in Flora of Panama Part 9, Ann, Missenri Bot. 
Gard, 60(3):573-790. 


D’Arcy, W.. (1974b). Solanum and its close relatives in Florida. Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 
61(3):819-867, 


EpMonps, J. M. (1972). <A Synopsis of The Taxonomy of Solanum sect. Solanui 
{Maurella] in South America. Kew Bull. 27(1):95-114. 


GERASIMENKO, I, L, & REZNIKovA, S. A, (1968). A Cytological Investigation of the Genus 
Solanum L. Bot, Zurn, $3:505-513. Index to Plant Chromosome numbers for 1968. 
Rec, VEG, 68:74(1970). 


HENDERSON, R. J, F. (1974), Solanum nigrum L. (Solanaceae) and Related Species in 
Australia, Contr, Gd Herb, 16. 


STEARN, W. T, (1972), Philip Miller and the Plants from the Chelsea Physic Garden 
presented to the Royal Society of London, 1723-1796. Trans. Bot. Sec. Edinb. 
41(3):293-307. 


Austroballeya 1 (1): 23-24 (1977) 


THE DELETION OF PENTAPANAX SEEM. FROM THE 
FLORA OF AUSTRALIA 


By W. R. Philipson 
Department of Botany, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand 


Summary 


The two Queensland spectes currently referred to Peafapanax are shown to be mem- 
bers of Polyscias, Appropriate new combinations are made: Polyscias willmeottii (FE, Muell.) 
Philipson and Polyscias bellendenkerensis (F. M. Bailey) Philipson. 


The genus Pentapanax Seem. (Araliaceae) is currently considered to occur 
in South America, India, China, South-east Asia and Taiwan, with an outlier on 
two volcanic peaks in east Java, and in addition two species attributed 
to this genus occur in Queensland. Hutchinson (1967) proposed 
a more restricted application of the genus, reviving Coudenbergia 
Marchal. for the South American species, and erecting a new genus, Parapent- 
apanax Hutch., to include species with their flowers arranged racemosely. The 
position of the two Queensland species, however, was not affected. 


Pentapanax is placed in the Aralieae, a Tribe characterized by the imbricate 
arrangement of the petals when in bud. Indeed, Pentapanax is closely related to 
Aralia L. from which it differs principally by having the style arms united into a 
column. The importance of the aestivation of the corolla in subdividing the 
family has long been recognized and is still upheld, 


The first Australian species attributed to Pentapanax, P. willmottii F. Muell., 
was described from material which bore fruit but neither petals nor stamens, and 
when the Queensland Flora (Bailey, pt 2, 1900) was published, no further 
information appears to have been available. A second species, P. bellenden- 
keriensis F, M. Bailey, was also described from fruiting material. So far as can 
be ascertained, no information about the corolla of either Australian species has 
been published, so that the attribution to Pentapanax could be no more than 
tentative. In view of the disjunct distribution, and the atypical facies of the two 
Queensland species, collections of flowering material of both species were borrowed 
from the Queensland Herbarium and carefully examined. It was evident by 
dissection that the petals were valvate in bud, and this was confirmed by examining 
serial sections of the corolla-buds. No trace of overlapping of the margins of the 
petals occurred. In the light of this additional evidence the position of the two 
species in Pentapanax can no longer be upheld. Indeed, they must be placed in 
another Tribe, the Schefflereae, where they agree in every respect with the genus 
Polyscias Forst. (in the broad sense of Bernardi, 1971: in a narrower sense they 


24 


would come within the genus Kissodendron Seem.). Their geographical distribu- 
tion and general facies are in accord with this, as are such technical characters 
as the pinnate (or bi-pinnate) leaves and the articulated pedicel. The necessary 
new combinations follow: 

1. Polyscias willmottii (F. Muell.) Philipson, comb. nov. 


Pentapanax willmottii F. Muell., Australas. J. Pharmacy, 2:125 (1887); 
F. M. Bailey, The Queensland Flora: 2:730 (1900). 


2. Polyscias bellendenkerensis (F. M. Bailey) Philipson, comb. nov. 


Pentapanax bellendenkeriensis F. M. Bailey, Queensland Agric. J. 15:491 
(1904); and in Meston, A, Queensland Dept. Agric. Report of Govt. 
Expedition to Bellenden-Ker Range, (1904). 


REFERENCES 
BAILEY, F, M. (1900). The Queensland Flora, pt. 2, Brisbane, Queensland Govt. 


Bernaroi, L, (1971). Araliacearum Madagascariae et Comores propositum. 2. Revisio et 
-- taxa nova Polysciadium. Candollea 26:13-89. 


Hurcuinson, J. (1967). Genera of Flowering Plants, vol. 2. Oxford, Clarendon Press. 


Austrobaileya 1 (1): 25~42 (1977) 


NOTES ON LEGUMINOSAE. 1 


By L, Pedley 


Queensland Herbarium, Brisbane 


Summary 


The species known generally as Acacia ligulata is a subspecies of A. bivenosa DC. 
and the combination A. bivenosa subsp. wayi, based on A, salicina Lind]. var. Wayae Maiden, 
is made. A, bivenosa subsp, bivenosa and subsp. way? are not sharply differentiated. A. 
élliptica A. Cunn. ex Benth. and A. bivenesa var. borealis Hochr, are synonyms of A. bivenosa 
subsp. wayl, A. mintula Pedley is a new name for A, propingita Pedley non A. Rich. A. 
dissoneura F, Muell. is a synonym of A, dineura F. Muell. 


Prosapis glandulosa Torr., P. juliflora (Sw.) DC., P. juliflora Sw.) DC. x P. velutina 
Woot. and P. limensis Benth, are naturalized in Australia, A key to distinguish them is piven. 
A key to the five species of Lysiphylium found in Australia is provided. New combina- 
tions are L. carronii (F. Muell.) Pedley based on Bauhinia carronii F. Muell., £. fhookeri 


(F. Muell.} Pedley, based on B. hookeri F. Muell., and ZL. gilvum (F. M. Bailey) Pedley 
based on B, cunninghamit Benth, forma gilva F. M. Bailey. 


Caesalpina robusta (C. 'T. White} Pedley is a new combination based on Mezonemuron 
robustuit C. T. White and C. subtropica is a new name for C. braehycarpa (Benth.) Hattink 
non (A. Gray) Fisher. 


Daviesia flava Pedley and D. discolor Pedley are described and distinguished from 
D, arborea W. Hill, D. latifolia R.Br. and D. mimosoides R.Br. D. corymbosa does not occur 
in Queensland. 

A key to the six Queensland taxa of Mirbelia is given. M. speciosa subsp. ringrosei 
(F. M. Bailey) Pedley, based on M. ringrosei F. M. Bailey, is a new combination. M, 
confertifora Pedley is a new species that has previously been confused with Av. aotoides F. 
Muell, 


Stylosanthes sundaica Taub. is conspecific with S. humilis H.B.K. which is naturalized in 
Queensland. 


Three new names in Teplirosia ave: T. spechtii Pedley, 1. rufuia Pedley and 7. benthamii 
Pediey based on T. purpurea (L.) Pers. var. axillaris Baker fil., 7. purpurea var. rifescens 
Benth. and 7, rosea F. Muell. ex Benth. var. angustifolia Benth. respectively. T. delestangii 
and 7. virens are described as new. 


MIMOSOIDEAE 


ACACIA MILL. 
1. A note on A. bivenosa 


The species generally known as Acacia ligulata is one of a group of related 
taxa widely spread in arid and semiarid areas of Australia. In the castern part 
of its range it is a well defined species but in the Northern Territory and Western 
Australia it exhibits a considerable range of variation, complicated in Western 
Australia by the presence of a number of related species. In an attempt to 
determine the extent of the variation within the species and to distinguish it from 
allied species, specimens of the following taxa were examined: A. biverosa DC., 


26 


A. cupularis Domin, A. elliptica A. Cunn. ex Benth., A. ligulata A. Cunn. ex 
Benth., A. pallidiramosa Maiden & Blakely, A. rostellifera Benth., A. salicina 
Lindl. var. wayae Maiden, A. scirpifolia Meisn., A. sclerosperma FPF. Mueil., 
A, tysonii Luehm. and A. xanthina Benth. 


Some of the taxa are well defined, but considerable integrading occurs among 
others and there are many intermediates, Detailed consideration of all species 
is beyond the scope of this note, especially as my experience of Acacia in Western 
Australia is more or Jess confined to the study of herbarium specimens. I am 
grateful therefore to Mr, B, R. Maslin (PERTH) who has commented on the 
species of Acacia in the vicinity of Shark Bay and on the identity of the types of 
A. ligulata and A. elliptica which he examined at Kew. His opinions have been 
helpful and have influenced me, but I am solely responsible for the treatment of 
A. bivenosa below. 


The following key is merely a guide to the identification of the taxa studied: 


i, Phyllodes rather thin (not coriaceous}, not coarsely wrinkled when dry, rather narrow 
and elongate, obscurely penninerved, a second longitudinal nerve often faintly developed. 

A. rostellifera 

Phyllodes thick, coriaceous, coarsely wrinkled when dry, a second longitudinal nerve 
developed when phyllode more than (7~)10 mm wide. 2. 


2. Phyllodes narrow, thick, wuninerved; pod much contracted between and convex 
over the seeds, valves hard. A, selerosperma & A, scirpifalia 
Phyllodes broader, not as thick, sometimes with more than one nerve; pods neither convex 
over seeds nor woody. 3. 

3. Phyllodes broad, 2—-nerved, yellowish or glaucous; racemes more than 5—branched; flowers 
large, calyx limm or more long. A, xanthina 


Phyllodes i- or 2~nerved, yellowish or glancous; racemes with fewer than 5 branches or 
peduncles axillary; the calyx Jess than 1 mm long. 4, 


4, Plants tomentose (hairs spreading); heads always on axillary peduncles. A. tysonii 
Plants glabrous or with sparse appressed hairs, heads on axillary peduncles or in axillary 
racemes, A, bivenosa 


Acacia ligulata 


A. ligulata A. Cunn. ex Benth., Lond. J. Bot. 1:362 (1842) Syntypes: Dirk Hartog 
I, Jan 1822, Cunningham (K); New Holland, Fraser (K, not seen). 


I have seen one syntype (Cunningham), a fragmentary specimen with less 
wrinkled and shorter phyllodes than is usual in the plant usually known as 
A, ligulata, It bears two pods and the structure of the inflorescence is difficult to 
determine, It is apparently a raceme of heads. The label of the specimen lacks 
the collecting details usually found on Cunningham’s specimens and has only a 
pencilled label “4/323” on one twig. From Cunningham’s manuscripts it was 
found that it was collected on King’s 4th voyage on Dirk Hartog Island and 
should bear the number 326 (Maslin, in litt.), I have not seen Fraser’s specimen 
but a specimen labelled “N. Holld, Fraser” determined by Bentham as A. salicina 
was located by Maslin under A. salicina. It is probably the other syntype. Maslin 
has tentatively referred this specimen to A. rostellifera, and has suggested that: 
Cunningham’s specimen might also be referred to A. rostellifera or to a taxon 
somewhat intermediate between A. “ligulata’ and A. rostellifera. 


Bentham (1864) treated A. liguiata as a synonym of A. salicina, Black 
(1920) discussed the matter and concluded that A. ligulata and A. salicina were 
not conspecific. It is now likely that A. ligulata and A. rostellifera might be 
conspecific, though their relationship to A. bivenosa is obscure. 


AE 


- Acacia biyenosa 


Herbarium material shows variation in three characters, all of which contribute 
to the general facies of the plant. The characters are: (a) dimensions of phyllodes; 
(b) number of longitudinal nerves of the phyllode; (c) arrangements of heads, 
in racemes or single on axillary peduncles. 


Narrow phyllodes have a single nerve, broader ones two, or rarely, three; 
and there is a highly significant correlation between the width of the phyllode and 
the development of the second nerve. The width at which the transition from 1— 
to 2—nerved phyllodes occurs is 7-10 mm; that is, phyllodes more than 10 mm 
wide have two nerves; phyllodes less than 7 mm wide have one; while phyllodes 
7-10 mm wide can have one or two nerves. Uni— and binerved phyllodes some- 
times occur on one twig. 


The arrangement of heads also varies. Plants with narrow phyllodes tend to 
have heads in racemes, but there is no absolute correlation between the width of 
phyllodes and the development of racemes. Plants with broad, binerved phylicdes 
sometimes have racemose heads, Axillary heads and racemes of heads are some- 
times found on the one plant. Racemes sometimes grow out into leafy branches 
so that the peduncles become lateral on vegetative shoots. 


Because of the range of variation delimitation of taxa is difficult but, because 
the variation of one character is correlated with variation of other characters, at 
least in the majority of cases, and because there is some geographical segregation 
of combinations of characters it is possible to distinguish two subspecies. 


A. bivenosa from the north-western coast of Western Australia and what is 
currently known as A. ligulata from western New South Wales have been treated 
as subspecies. There is clinal variation from south-east to north-west with a 
distinct steepening of the cline towards the north-west. The recognition of two 
subspecies may be somewhat artificial but as the zone of intergrading between the 
two is small it enables all but a small proportion of plants to be referred to one 
or other of the subspecies, 


The subspecies are distinguished as follows: 


Phylledes 2-nerved, 2-5cm long, (0-7-)0-8-2-2cm wide, usually less than 3:5 times as 
long as wide; heads on axillary peduncles more than 12 mm long, or less commonly in 
axillary racemes, or rarely inflorescences of both types. A. bivenosa subsp. bivenesa. 


Phyllodes usually {—nerved, 2-10 em long, 0-3-1(-1:6) cm wide 3-7 times as long as wide; 
heads in axillary racemes, the branches less than 12mm long. A. bivenosa subsp. way. 


Acacia bivenosa DC., Prod. 2:452 (1852), Leg. Mem. 448 (1827) (“binervosa”’). 
Type: Nouy. Hollande céte orient., Mus. de Paris, 1821 (G-DC, holo; 
BM, iso} 


A. elliptica A, Cunn. ex Benth., Lond. J. Bot. 1:347 (1842) Lectotype: 


Bay of Rest, Feb an , Cunningham (KX) 


A, bivenosa DC. var borealis Hochr., Candollea 2:376 (1925), Type: 
Broome, Feb 1905, Hochreutiner 2828 (G, holo) 


A. bivenosa subsp. bivenosa 


Phyllodes usually 2—nerved, 2-5 cm long, (7—)8+5-22 mm wide, usually 
less than 3-5 times as long as wide. Heads on axillary peduncles more 
than 12mm long or less commonly in axillary racemes, or both. 


C 


28 


A, bivenosa subsp. bivenosa is not sharply differentiated from A. bivenosa 
subsp. wayi, but the circumscription of the subspecies allows the inclusion of plants 
with unusual combinations of characters. Definition of a taxon in such an 
arbitrary way may be theoretically undesirable but it enables a name to be applied 
to plants somewhat intermediate between A. bivenosa subsp. wayi (narrow 
phyllodes and heads in racemes) and most plants of A. bivenosa which have 
broad phyllodes and heads on axillary peduncles. It is also necessary so that 
there is no doubt about the application of the name. A. bivenosa the type of which 
which is itself rather intermediate. . 

The type specimen is clearly labelled “céte orient” and was cited by de 
Candolle as such in both the Prodromus and the Memoires sur la Famille des 
Legumineuses, where the species was referred to in error as Acacia binervosa. It 
is not at all likely that the specimen came from eastern Australia. It was collected 
by Baudin’s expedition which visited both the east and west coasts of Australia. 
Considering the difficulties encountered by the expedition it is not surprising that 
that specimens were wrongly labelled. At the British Museum (Natural History) 
there is a specimen with the label “Nouv. Hollande. Cote occidentale, ile des 
amiraus”, on which the name Leschenault has been added in pencil. One or 
both of these specimens could be isotypes. Labillardiere never visited the north- 
western coast, 

The holotype has glabrous wrinkled phyllodes 30-42 mm long, 7—11 mm 
broad with two longitudinal nerves. It has 20—flowered heads in glabrous axillary 
3~—branched racemes, the axis 22 mm and the branches 12mm long. The axis 
of the inflorescence is produced into a leafy shoot. 

Selection of a lectotype of A. elliptica presented some difficulty. Several twigs 
are mounted on one sheet segregated as a type in herb. Kew. There is one 
label: “Bay of Rest, Exmouth Gulf, and Dampiers Archipelago, Feb 

ao , Dirk Hartog’s Island, Jan 5 . Two twigs in the lower half of the sheet 

have broad binerved phyllodes and lack flowers or fruits. One of them has a 
‘‘shp-on” label indicating that it was from Dirk Hartog’s Island. It is coarser than 
other specimens of A. bivenosa I have seen and it is referred with some doubt to 
A, xanthina. Another twig bears a small label showing that it came from 
Dampiers Archipelago. It is presumed that one or both of the remaining twigs 
came from the Bay of Rest and constitutes the lectotype. Despite the indefinite- 
ness of the lectotypification the application of the name A. elliptica is clear. 

The holotype of A. bivenosa var. borealis has 2— or sometimes 3—nerved 
phyllodes 3-5—4-5cm long, 11-17 mm wide and the heads were apparently on 
axillary peduncles. It bears fruit not flowers. The specimen may have come 
from a young plant as one phyllode has a pair of pinnae at the top. Lazarides 
6549 from Cable Beach, Broome is a good match for Hochreutiner’s specimen. 


Acacia bivenosa subsp. wayi (Maiden) Pedley, comb. et. stat. nov. Based on 
A, salicina Lindl. var wayi Maiden, Trans. Roy. Soc. Sth Aust. 32:277 
(1908) (“Wayae”). Syntype: Marion Bay, Sep 1907, Rogers (K, iso) 
A, cupularis Domin, Mem. Soc. Sci. Boheme 1921-2. 2:45 (1923). 
Type: Bridgetown to Kajonup and Slab Hut Gully, in 1910, 
Dorrien-Smith (kK, holo). 

A. pallidiramosa Maiden & Blakley, J. Roy. Soc. W. Aust. 13:12 (1927) 
Type: No locality, date or collector (K, iso). 
Phyllodes usually 1—nerved, (2:5—)3:5-10cm long, 3—-8:5 mm _ wide, 
usually more than 3:5 times as long as wide. Heads in axillary racemes, 
the branches usually less than 12 mm long. 


29 


Bentham (1864) regarded A. ligulata as being conspecific with A. salicina 
Lindl. Black (1920) recognised that two species had been included under the 
name A, salicind, A. salicina sens. strict. and what he considered to be A. Igitlata. 
Black’s application of the name A. ligulata has generally been followed since but, 
as noted above, examination of type material indicates that Black’s application of 
the name is not correct and that A. Ugulata is probably conspecific with 
A. rostellifera. 


Maiden had already recognised the heterogeneity of A. salicina and he des- 
cribed A. salicina var. wayae. Maiden named the plant in honour of Sir Samuel 
Way, and the feminine-form “wayae” is corrected here to “wayi”. The single 
isosyntype | have seen has narrow elongated phyllodes and is representative of 
the plant usually known as A. ligulata in the south-eastern part of its range. 


The holotype of A. cupularis also has narrow phyllodes and the inflorescence 
is reduced to a single head, though there are indications that it is the remnant 
of a reduced raceme. Other specimens from south-western Western Australia 
have 23 branched racemes as well as single heads. 


A. pallidiramosa is referred to A. bivenosa subsp. way! with some doubt. 
The isotype examined consists of two sterile twigs and a packet of seeds from 
which the plant which bore the twigs was grown. There is a small label on which 
is written “Mohrunga Cannsigon”. I do not know the significance of the words. 
The specimen is similar to some of A. bivenosa subsp. wayi and A. pallidiramosa 
should be referred to this taxon. 


2. Acacia mimula Pedley, nom. nov. Based on Acacia propinqua Pedley, 
Contrib. Qd Herb. 15:4 (1974), nom. illeg. non A. Richard (1846). 


The name Acacia propinqua Pedley is illegitimate, being a later homonym of 
A, propinqua A, Richard. It is regretted that the earlier name was overlooked 
previously. 


3. A, dissoneura F. Muell., South Sci. Record (July 1882). Syntypes: Port 
Darwin, Schultz 336 (MEL); Liverpool River, Gulliver (MEL). 


Mr. B. R. Maslin (in tt.) suggested after examining type material that A. 
dissoneura should be referred to A. dineura F. Muell. Since then I have also seen 
type material and agree with his suggestion. 


Prosopis L, 


The identification of naturalized plants-is often difficult mainly because one 
is usually not acquainted with the plants in their native country and adequate 
herbarium material is rarely available for comparison. Prosopis is a particularly 
difficult genus to deal with as the taxa introduced are believed to come from both 
North and South America and there is no modern treatment of the genus which 
includes species from both continents. 


I have consulted Benson (1941), Graham (1960) and Johnston (1962) 
(for the North American species), Burkart (1940) (the South American species) 
and Rowell (1969). Material at the Herbarium, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew 
(K) was examined. Burkart determined some South American material but 
inexplicably neglected some sheets, and no one has critically examined all the 
American material. 


From the literature it is evident that there is considerable range of variation 
within species and intergrading of species. P. laevigata, P. glandulosa, P. articulata 
and P. velutina could well be treated as subspecies of P. juliflora, though this does 


30 


not solve the problem of determination. It merely moves it a lower level in the 
classification. Benson and Johnston differ somewhat in their treatment of the same 
‘taxa. Benson recognized P. juliflora var. glandulosa, P, juliflora var, torreyana 
and P, juliflora var. velutina as occurring in the United States, while Johnston 
excluded P. juliflora but treated the same taxa as Benson as P. glandulosa var. 
glandulosa, P. glandulosa var, torreyana and P. velutina respectively. Johnston 
believed that the “morphic intermediacy of some individuals” was the result of 
hybridization among formerly more discrete taxa, mainly due to the expansion of 
the ranges of the taxa since the advent of domesticated grazing animals. He wrote 
of “the blurring of a formerly more precise geographic distribution pattern”. 


If several introductions of Prosopis have been made to Australia it is possible 
that some plants intermediate between described taxa (that is, plants “atypical” of 
any described taxon) would have been introduced. Assigning naturalized plants 
to described taxa without any knowledge of these t taxa in their native countries 
is therefore difficult. 


In the taxonomic treatment of the North American species workers have 
emphasised foliage characters, though mature pods may also be useful. Pods swell 
considerably during development and, not knowing the exact stage of the develop- 
ment of the fruits on specimens, I have been cautious in applying characters of the 
pod. On the whole the collections in Australia herbaria are poor. Most are 
‘either in flower or fruit, but few collectors noted anything of the plant and most 
specimens have been: -poorly preserved, 


Some material from BRI was determined by Dr. H. S. Irwin of the New 
York Botanical Gardens in 1962. He stated (in litt.) that he relied heavily on 
Johnston’s paper though there appear to be some inconsistencies in his determin- 
ations. 

Key to taxa of Prosopis naturalized in Australia. 


Leaflets more than 5 times as long as broad, or more than 20 mm long, widely spaced on the 
single pair of pinnae, the intervals about as wide as the leaflets themselves or wider 
1. P. glandulosa var. glandulosa 


Leaflets 2-5 times as long as broad, up to 12 mm long, not widely spaced on the rhachis 


Pinnae 1 pair, rarely 2 (always predominantly I on all specimens examined); leaflets 

12-18 pairs (25 on one specimen); raceme to 6 cm long, shorter than leaves 

2. P. julifiora 

Pinnae 2-3 pairs, occasionally 5, rarely 1; leaflets 10-15 pairs, rarely 18. Spike 
iQ—12 cm long, longer than the leaves. 


Pinnae 2 pairs; leaflets 12-15 (-18) pair, 7-12mm fong, glabrous except 
for long hairs on margins or with short hairs on upper surface; pedicels 
0-Smm long; calyx 1-1-1:2mm long, corolla 3~3-8 mm long 

3. P, juliflora x P. velutina 

Pinnae 2—5 pairs {rarely 1); leaflets 10-15 pairs, 4~9 mm long, with scattered 
long hairs or moderately pubescent on both surfaces; pedicels often 
0-2-0:3 mm long, sometimes 0-5 mm; flowers smaller—calyx 0:6-0°9 mm 
long, corolla to 3mm long 4. P. limensis 


1. P. glandulosa Torr. 

Western Australia: Carnarvon, Jul 1953, Coleman 169 (PERTH). Queensland. Porr 
Curtis Disrrict: Bushley (near Rockhampton), Dec 1953, Tayler (BRI); Gladstone, 
Oct 1957, Taylor (BRI). Burnetr District: Gayndah, Nov 1952, Crocker (BRI). DARLING 
Downs Disrraicr: Yandilla, Mar 1955, Rea (BRI); Brookstead, Nov 1956, Offmer (BRI); 
Millmerran, May 1960, Winsren (BRI); May 1959, Taylor (BRI); Pittsworth, Apr 1959, 
Pittsworth Shire Council. New South Wales: Barham, April 1969, McGowan (NSW). 


This is Prosopis glandulosa var. glandulosa. There is one specimen of 
P. glandulosa var. torreyana (L. Benson) M. C. Johnston, Port Augusta Sports 
Ground, Jun 1960, Symon 486 (ADW), which, judging from the locality and the 
absence of any later specimens or collectors? notes, is probably not naturalized. 


31 


2. Prosopis juliflora (Sw.) DC. 


A shrub, usually spiny; branchlets with scattered long hairs or moderately 
densely pubescent, glabrescent. Pinnae 1 or occasionally 2 pairs, petiole 0-5-3-+5 
cm long, it and rachis, glabrous, with scattered long hairs or moderately densely 
pubescent; leaflets 12-18 pairs (25 on one specimen); 5-12 mm long, 1-5=2-5 
mm broad, 2:5—5 times as long as broad; indumentum varying from glabrous on 
upper surface with a few hairs on margins and midribs beneath to subglabrous 
above with moderately dense long hairs on lower surface, especially prominent 
on margins. Racemes ca 6cm long; pedicels 0:4—-0-6 mm long, sometimes with 
long hairs; calyx 0-8-1 mm long sometimes with long hairs outside; corolla 
2'5-2:8 mm long; stamens 4-4-5 mm long. Pod flat when immature, somewhat 
contracted between seeds, up to 15 cm long, 1 em broad when mature, as thick as 
broad, somewhat moniliform. 


New South Wales: Rosewood H.S., 95 km NW of Ivanhoe, Jun 1975, Plekard 2577 
(NSW); Broken Hill, Jun 1969, Symon 6736 & 6748 (CADW, NSW), Jul 1961, Green 
(NSW); Broken Hill South, May 1969, Garrick (ADW—~2Z specimens); towards Broken Hill, 
Sep 1962, O'Neill (ADW), 10:5 miles from Silverton on Silverton-Broken Hill road, May 
1969, Garrick 2 (ADW); 4~5 miles from Broken Hill on Cockburn side, May 1969, Garrick 
1 (ADW); + 17 miles E of Cockburn, May 1969, Garrick 3 (ADW); 5 miles E of. Cock- 
burn, Jun 1963, Larwood (AD); Cockburn, Jun 1969, Symon 6730 & 6749 (ADW); Urana, 
Dec 1959, Shire Clerk ONSW). 


Duplicates of two specimens from Broken Hill were identified by Burkart as 
Prosopis juliflora, probably of Caribbean origin. The specimens from the 
Cockburn-Broken Hill area are on the whole less pubescent than those from 
Urana. 


Burkart’s identification of Broken Hill material is in line with Johnston’s 
treatment of P. juliflora. The more pubescent material possibly indicates some 
intergrading with P. velutina. The ranges of the two do not meet in North 
America, but there is a specimen of P. velutina from what appears to be a 
cultivated tree near Menindee (Old Henley Station garden. Dec 1949, Henderson 
478 (NSW))}, so that it is possible that hybridization could have occurred in 
cultivation. 


3. P. joliflora (Sw.) DC. x P. velutina Woot. 


Shrub (?) with spines up to 1-5 cm long or none; branchlets glabrous or 
with scattered long hairs. Pinnae 2 pairs; petiole 0-5-3 cm long, it and rachis 
glabrous or with moderately dense long hairs; leaflets 12-15, occasionally, 18 pairs, 
7—-12(-14) mm long, 2-5-3-5¢(-4:5) mm broad, 2-5—5 times as long as broad, 
glabrous except for long hairs on margins or with short hairs on upper surface, 
Raceme up to 11 cm long; pedicel 0-5mm long; calyx 1:1-1:2 mm_ long, 
sometimes with a few long hairs outside; corolla 3~3-7 mm long, rather more 
densely pubescent inside than in other forms; stamens 4:5—5:5 mm long. Pod 
thick up to 17 cm long and 1 cm broad. 


Western Australia: Carnarvon, Jul 1953, Coleman 170 (PERTH), Aug 1956, Meadly 
(PERTH, BRI); Gasgoyne River. flats, Carnarvon, —May 1962, Aplin 1552 (PERTH); 
2 miles 8 of Carnarvon, Oct 1958, Menzies, Nov 1964, Donovan (PERTH). 


Irwin determined Meadly s.n. (BRI) as “P. velutina Woot. > P. articulata 
S. Wats.”. These two species intergrade (Johnston p. 86) but it seems that 
whenever a plant has some indumentum on the foliage P. velutina is assumed to 
be one of its parents. It keys to P. velutina in both Benson and Johnston but is 
not like undoubted P. velutina from Arizona (Brass 14342, BRI). 


32 


4, Prosopis limensis Benth. 

Tree with spines up to 2 cm long, sometimes absent; branchlets with scattered 
long hairs becoming glabrous. Pinnae 2~3 pairs (up to 5 pairs in specimens from 
Northern Territory and rarely 1 in specimens from Geraldton); petiole 1-2 cm 
long; it and rachis with scattered long hairs (ca 0:3.mm long); leaflets 10-15 
pairs, 4-9 mm long, 1-5—~3 mm broad, usually ca 3 times as long as broad but 
ranging from 2—5 mm, with scattered long hairs or (in Geraldton material) mod- 
erately pubescent on both surfaces. Raceme 10-12 cm long; pedicel 0-2—0-3 mm 
long (0:5, in Geraldton material); calyx 0-6-0-9mm long; corolla 2-5-3 mm 
long. Pod thick, curved, up to 15 cm long and 1 em broad, broader in Geraldton 
specimens, 

Western Australia: Geraldton, Jan 1955, Marr (PERTH), Feb 1963, Saffrey 46 (AD, 
PERTH); De Grey Station homestead, Jul 1936, Anderson (PERTH). Northern Territory: 
Elsey, sine coll. NT 11867 (NT); Elliott, May 1965, Newton NT 11787 (NT); Ranken, 
Alexandria, Nov 1961, Paine NT 8521 (NT); Coniston, Feb 1955, Chippendale NT 190 (NT). 
Queensland: Burke District: 34 miles S of Burketown, Tracey (BRI); Cloncurry, Aug 1958, 
Sillar (BRI), Oct 1958, Sultivan (BRI); Hughenden, Jul 1963, EHverist 7288 & 7289 (BRI); 
Winton, Nov 1954, Winton Shire Ceuncil 7 (BRI, CANB). Coox Distrricr: Karumba, 
Aug (973, J. 8S. Johnson NSW 107431. 

The Geraldton specimens are referred here with some doubt. As well as the 
differences noted in the description the leaflets have rather prominent secondary 
veins, 

Irwin identified this taxon as both Prosopis chilensis (Mol.) Stuntz (Winton 
Shire Council 7 and Sillar) and P. limensis Benth. (Sullivan). He also identified 
specimens from a tree cultivated in the Brisbane Botanic Gardens (White 2390 & 
8642, BRI, GH) as P. chilensis, both of which were cited by Johnston under 
P. pallida (Willd.) HBK. 


P, pallida has been something of a puzzle. Burkart did not mention it and 
it is evidently close to P. limensis. I have followed Bentham (1842) in treating it 
as being glabrous. 


5. Prosopis flexuosa DC. 

Queensland: WaRREGO District: “Comongin”, about 10 miles NE of Quilpie, Nov 1957, 
Everist 5902 (BRI. 
_ _ The species is not included in the key as it is known from only one locality 
in Queensland. It forms large clumps in the vicinity of “Comongin” homestead 
but has evidently not spread though there are evidently large areas of country 
suitable for its growth. 

It differs from P. juliflora in having narrower pods and more pubescent 
branches, 


CAESALPINIOIDEAE 
LYSIPHYLLUM (BENTH.) DE WIT 


De Wit (1956) in his treatment of the tribe Bauhinieae in Malesia recognized 
seven genera, one of them Lystphyllum which had been originally described by 
Bentham as a section of Bauhinia. The rather narrow circumscription of genera 
was rejected by Hutchinson (1964) who referred all genera recognized by de Wit 
to Bauhinia, Brenan (1967) and Schmitz (1972) however followed de Wit’s 
treatment of Bauhinia sens. lat. 

The 5 species of Lysiphyllum that occur in Australia are distinguished as 
follows: 

Receptacle (disk-bearing base of calyx) cylindrical; sepals 4~10 mm long; leaflets 2-5-4-5 cm 
long, 16-32 mm wide, 1-3-1-8 times as long as wide, + oblomg, broadest at the base, 
tapering gradually to the rather broad, obtuse apex. 


33 


Scandent shrub; tendrils circinnate but caducous; calyx lobes 4~5 mm long; pods up 
to ca 3.cm wide i binatunt 


Trees without tendrils; calyx 7-10 mm long; pods 3~4cm wide L. hookeri 
Receptacle turbinate or campanulate; sepals 2—5 mm long; leaflets 7-22mm wide, 1+2-3-5 
times as long as wide, either broadest below the middle and tapering gradually to rather 
narrow acute apex or broadest about the middle and tapering equally to base and apex. 


Leaflets broadest about the middle, equally tapering to each end, 1:2~1-+7 times as 
long as wide; calyx lobes with marginal and sometimes mid-ner ve, buds therefore 
ribbed LE, cunninghamii 


Leaflets broadest neat the middle and tapering to narrow apex, 1:5~3-5 times as 
long as wide: calyx lobes and buds not ribbed. 

Indumentum of outside of calyx red-brown; pod 2-5—4 om wide E, carronii 

Indumentum of outside of calyx yellowish; pod 1-2-5 cm wide L. gilvuim 


The transfer of L. binatum and L. cunninghamii from Bauhinia to Lysiphyllum 
was made by de Wit. The other new names required are: 


Lysiphyllum hoekeri (F. Mueil.) Pedley, comb. nov. Based on Bauhinia hookeri 
F, Muell., Trans. Phil. Inst. Vict. 3:51 (1858). Type: Gilbert River, 
Mueller (MEL) 


L.. hookeri (RF. Muell.) de Wit ex Schmitz, Bull. Jard, Bot. Nat. Belg. 
-43:407 (1973), nom. inval. 


Schmitz attributed the name L. hookeri to de Wit, but de ‘Wit did not make 
the combination, nor can it be attributed to Schmitz as he cited no basionym. 


Lysiphylium carronii (F. Muell.) Pediey, comb. nov, Based on Bauhinia carronii 
F, Muell., Trans. Phil. Inst. Vict. 3:49 (1858). Type: Burdekin River, 
Mueller (MEL, Lectotype, designated here) 


Lysiphyllum gilvam (F. M. Bailey) Pediey, stat. nov. Based on Bauhinia cunning- 
hamti Benth. forma gilva F. M. Bailey, Qd Ag. J. 25:287 (1910) Type: 
Georgina River, Bick (BRI, holo) 


B, cunninghamii Benth. forma rosea F. M. Bailey, loc. cit, Type: Georgina 
River, Bick (BRI, holo) 


B. leichhardtii F, Muell. var. cinarescens F. Muell. in Winnecke, Explor. 
Report (1884). Type: Central Australia, Winnecke (MEL, holo) 


Northern Territory: 8 miles [13 km] NE of Abadaba Bore, Lake Nash, Oct 1955, 
Chippendale NT 1813. Queensland: Burke Disrricr: Nonda, between Hughenden and 
Cloncurry, Feb 1931, Hubbard & Winders 7293; Flinders River, Aug 1916, White. GREGORY 
Norra District: Georgina River, 8 miles [13 km] NW of “Headingly”, Sep 1954, Chippen- 
dale NT 254; Georgina River, Urandangie, Sep 1954, Chippendale NT 253; Glenormiston, 
Jan 1935, Boyle. GReGorY Souru Districr: 38 miles [61 km] W of Windorah, Sep 1966, 
Boyland 151; [E of Windorah] 25°23’S 143°41’E, Jun 1969, Trapneff E50; “Morney Plains”, 
ca 80 miles [130 km] W of Windorah, Sep 1949, Ever ist 4111. MITCHELL District: 56 miles 
[90 km] S of Prairie, 21°36'S, Tun 1969, Trapnell B73; between Emerald & Longreach, Oct 
1913, farvis, Warreco Dy strricr: Thargomindah (cultivated), Nov 1954, Smith 6056; 
Charleville, Oct 1945, Clemens. New South Wales: Warroo via Bourke, Nov 1936, Morris. 


CAESALPINIA L. 

The uniting of Mezoneuron with Caesalpinia by Hattink (1974) appears 
to be justified. He transferred only two of the three Australian species of 
Mezoneuron to Caesalpinia and the name of one of these is illegitimate in 
Caesalpinia., 

The following new names are necessary: 


Caesalpinia subtropica Pedley, nom, et comb. nov. Based on Mesoneuron 
brachycarpum Benth., Fl. Aust. 2:278 (1864) 


34 


Caesalpinia brachycarpa (Benth.) Hattink, Reinwardtia 9:53 (1974), 
nom. illeg. non C. brachycarpa (A. Gray) Fisher (1893). Type: 
New South Wales: Richmond River, Moore (K, lecto, selected by 
Hattink, not seen) 


Caesalpinia robusta (C, T. White) Pedley, comb. nov, Based on Mezoneurum 
robustum C. T, White, Contrib, Arn. Arb. 4:43 (1933). Type: Cook 
District: Boonjie, Sep 1929, Kajewski 1206 (BRI, iso) 


Herbarium material of the species is poor, but it can be distinguished from 
C. scortechinii and C. subtropica by its larger leaflets and extremely prickly 
stem. 


PAPILIONOIDEAE* 
DAVIESIA SM, 


Though Daviesis corymbosa Sm. has been recorded from Queensland, it 
is apparently restricted to the central coast of New South Wales. Most of the 
specimens previously identified as D. corymbosa from Qucensland should be 
referred to D, mimosoides R.Br. which is widely spread in south-eastern Queens- 
land. In the south-eastern part of the Darling Downs District near Stanthorpe, 

latifolia R.Br. may sometimes be confused with D. mimosoides but is dis- 
tinguished by its broader leaves with prominent veins and racemes with pedicels 
almost to the base of the axis. Intermediates between the two species do occur 
rarely. D. arborea W. Hill is also similar to D. mimosoides but is usually a 
larger plant, developing into a small tree, with less coriaceous leaves gradually 
attenuate to the acute apex and flowers usually with a purplish keel, 

Two species D. discolor and D. flava described here as new have previously 
been referred to either D. mimosoides or D. arborea, They may be distinguished 
from D, mimosoides by the following key: 

Leaves 2-5-9-5 cm long, icss than 6 times as long as wide 


Leaves 1:5~3-3 cm wide with conspicuous anastomosing veins; inflorescence a raceme 
D. tlatifotia 


Leaves 1--1-4 cm wide, thinner in texture with less conspicuous venation; inflorescence 
a corymbose raceme D. mimosoides 


Leaves 5-15 cm long, more than 8 times as long as wide 
Leaves discolorous; axis of raceme up to 1 em long; shrub D, discolor 


Leaves not discolorous; axis of raceme usually 2cm or more, rarely i cm long; 
small trees or shrubs 


Calyx s+: truncate or emarginae; leaves thin in i ares acute, alienate to the 
apex; small trees D, arborea 
Calyx lobed; leaves not thin in texture, stele mucrenulate, not gradually 
tapered to apex D. flava 


Daviesia discolor Pedley, species nova affinis D, arboreae W. Hill foliis venatione 
promientiore leviter discoloribus, racemis brevioribus et habito differt. 
Typus: Henderson et al. H1026 (BRI, holotypus; A., CANB, K, L, 
NSW, PR, isotypi) 


* For note on name of subfamily sec Henan (1 967). 


35 


Frutex usque ad 1 m altus; ramuli angulares glabri; stipulae obseurae. Folia plana 
vel margine leviter incurvata, acuta aliquantum discoloria, reticulatim nervata aliquantum 
prominente, subsessilia, 7-15 cm longa, (4—-}6-8 mm lata, 10~20(~33)—plo longiora quam 
lata. Racermi singulare vel binatim in superis axillis dispositi; axis 5~10 mm longus; bractea 
minus quam |] mm longa praeditus; carina aliquantum brevior quam vexillum et alae. 
Legumen immaturum. 


Shrub to 1m tall; branchlets angular glabrous; stipules inconspicuous. 
Leaves flat or the margin slightly incurved, acute, slightly discolorous with some- 
what prominent reticulate nerves, subsessile, 7-15 cm long, (4~})6—-8 mm wide, 
10—20(--33) times longer than wide. Racemes arranged singly or in pairs in 
the upper axils; axis 5-10 mm long; bracts less than 1 mm long; calyx 2-7-3 mm 
long with fimbriate lobes 0:7~—0-8 mm long; keel a little shorter than the standard 
and wings. Pod immature. 


LetcuHarpT District: Blackdown Tableland, ca 23°50’S 149°E, Sep 1937, Simmons 
(sterile); Aug 1964, Gittins 926; Sep 1971, Henderson, Durrington & Sharpe H1026; Apr 
1971, Henderson, Andrews & Sharpe 860 (sterile). 


Daviesia flava Pedley, species nova; a D. mimosoidis R.Br. foliis elongatioribus, 
a i). arboreae W. Hill foliis apicem versus minus attenuatis, pedicellis- 
que plerumque longioribus calycis saepe brevioribus, ab amobus lobis 
superis claycis magis divisis, carina alas et vexillum aequanti differt, 
Typus: Webb & Tracey 5929 (BRI, holotypus; CANB, K, isotypi). 


Frutex usque 1-5 m altus; ramuli angulares glabri; stipulae 0-6-1 mm longae, Folia 
plana lineares vel anguste oblonga, obtusa mucronulata, 5—12 cm longa, 3~13 mm Tata, 
&8-20-—plo longiora quam lata; petiolus circa {| mm longus, Racemi glabri 1-3, in axillis 
superis dispositi: axis (1-})2-4-5cm longus; bractea ca 1-5mm longa; pedicelli plerumque 
in parte supera axis portati, 6-12 mm longi, versus apicem axis breviores. Flores flavi 5-6 
mm longi, calyx 2+5~3-5 mm longi lobis fimbriatis 6-7—-0-8 mm longis superis circa 2/3 
unitis praeditus; carina petala cetera + aequans. Legumen in parte latissima 1 cm latum. 


Shrub to 1-5 m tall; branchlets angular, glabrous; stipules 0-6-1 mm long. 
Leaves flat,. linear or narrowly oblong,. obtuse mucronulate, 5-12 cm long, 
3~13 mm wide, 8-20 times as long as broad, very obliquely reticulately pen- 
ninerved, prominently so when broad; petiole ca 1mm long. Racemes 1-3, in 
the upper axils, glabrous: axis (1-)2-4:5cm long; bracts ca 1:5 mm_ long; 
pedicels mostly in upper half of axis, 6-12 mm long shorter towards top of 
axis. Flowers yellow 5-6 mm long; calyx 2:5~-3-5 mm long with fimbriate lobes 
0-7—0-8 mm long the upper ones about 2/3 united; keel about as long as other 
petals. Pod ca 1 cm wide at broadest part. 


Coox Disrricr: Great Dividing Range on Cooktown road, in 1970, Wyatt; Clohesy 
River area, Feb 1963, Wyatt 23; Koah, Clohesy River, Nov 1967, Brass 33735; Kuranda- 
Mareeba road, Feb 1962, Webb & Tracey 5929, NorrH KENNEDY: Conjuboy Road, Oct 
1972, Althofer 328; 4 miles SW of Mt Garnet, Jun 1971, Hyland 502. 


MACROPTILIUM URB, 
Macroptiliun: bracteatum (Nees & Mart.) Marechal & Baudet. 


Previously (Pedley 1973) the combination AMacroptilium bracteatum was 
attributed to. Urban. At that time the combination had in fact not been made. 
Since then Phaseolus bracteatus has been transferred to Macroptilium by Mare- 


chal and Baudet (1974). The correct citation of the name is therefore as given 
above. 


36 


MIRBELIA SM. 
Key to Mirbelia in Queensland 


Upper surface of leaf conspicuously reticulate; ovules 2. MM, rubiifolia (Andr.) G, Don. 
Upper surface of leaf smooth or occasionally tuberculate, not conspicuously reticulate; 
ovules either 2-4 or 10-12, 


Flowers in racemes, terminal or in upper axils, sometimes much reduced; ovules 

a M. confertifiovra Pedley 
Flowers single in the axils 

Calyx lobes as long as the tube; ovules 10-12 MM. speciosa DC. 

Leaves 1-2 cm long (rarely longer); bracteoles shorter than calyx tube 

M. speciosa subsp. speciosa 


Leaves 2-3 cm or more long (those subtending flowers sometimes 
shorter); bracteoles longer than calyx tube 
M, speciosa subsp, ringrosei (F, M. Bailey} Pedley 
Calyx lobes shorter than the tube; ovules 2-4 
Leaves with a straight pungent point; ovary pubescent: ovules 4 
M. piengens A, Cunn. ex G, Don 


Leaves with a hooked point; ovary glabrous ovules 2 
M. aotoides F. Muell. 


Mirbelia confertiflora Pedley, sp. nov. 


Misapplied name: Mirbelia aotoides auct. non F. Muell; Thompson, Contrib. 
N.S.W. Nat. Herb. Fl. Ser, 101:19 (1961). 


Frutex usque ad 2 m altus; ramuli pilis sparsis appressis sericeis vestiti; stipulae nullae. 
Folia alternata vel irregulatim verticellata, linearia, acuta, mucronata, revoluta, supra glabra 
vel minute fuberculata, infra glabra vel pilis paucis appressis secus costam vestita, 1-5-2-5 
cm longa, usque 1-5 mm lata; petiolus 1:5 mm longus. Flores in racemis (saepe valde 
contractis) terminalibus vel axillis superis dispositi; bracteae anguste lanceolatae 3-5 mm 
longae marginibus leviter incurvis, infra pilis longis adscendentibus albis fuscisve vestitae; 
calyx 6-7 mm longus pilis densis albis adscentibus vestitus, lobis 3:5-4 mm longis fere 
aequilongis, superis usque ad 1 mm ab apice connatis; petala unguiculata aurantiacea; 
vexillum ieviter retusum, 4—3-5 mm longum, 10 mm latum ungue 2-5 mm longo, circa 12 
mm lato: alae basi auriculatae, oblongae obtusac, 5-6 mm longae, 2:5 mm latae leviter 
gibbosae versus basem, ungue 2:5 mm longo et 1-2 mm lato; carina 3+5-4-5 mm longa, 
2-3 mm lata, in latere prope basem gidbosa. Staminea filamenta 4—5 mm longa, versus 
apicem attenuata. Ovarium pglabrum circa 2:5 mm longum: stylus uncinatus aliquatum 
crassus; ovula 2. Legumina dehiscentia ca 4:5 mm longa; endocarpmm post maturiatem ab 
exocarpio secedens. Typus: Pediey 1539 (BRI, holo). 


Shrub to 2m tall; branchlets with sparse appressed silky hairs; stipules 
none, Leaves alternate or irregularly whorled, linear, acute mucronate, revolute, 
glabrous or minutely tuberculate above, glabrous or with a few appressed hairs 
along the midrib below, 1°5-2:5 cm long, up to 1:5 mm wide; petiole ca 
i-Smm long. Flowers in racemes’ (often much contracted) terminal or in 
upper axils; bracts narrow lanceolate 3:5 mm long with slightly incurved margins 
with dense long white or brown ascending hairs beneath; bracteoles on the pedicel, 
3-8 mm long, lanceolate, with dense brown hairs; calyx 6-7 mm long with dense 
white ascending hairs, the lobes 3-5~4 mm long, nearly equal in length, the upper 
united fo ca 1 mm of the apex; petals unguiculate, orange; yvexillum slightly 
retuse, 4—~5-5 mm long, 10 mm wide with a claw 2-5 mm long, ca 1-2 mm wide, 
alae auriculate at the base, oblong obtuse, 5:6 mm long, 2:5 mm wide, slightly 
gibbose towards the base, with a claw 2:5mm long and 1-2mm wide, keel 
3-54-35 mm long, 2-3 mm wide, gibbose on the side near the base. Staminal 
flaments 4-5 mm long, attenuate fowards the apex. Ovary glabrous, ca 2:5 
mm long; style hooked, rather thick; ovules two. Pods dehiscent ca 4:5 mm long; 
endocarp separating from epicarp after maturity. 


ay 


QUEENSLAND: Jolly’s Falls ca 8km N of Stanthorpe, Oct 1956, Shea $42; Oct 1963, 
Pedley 1539; The Summit, Sep 1958, Avichener; Girraween Nat. Park, near Wyberba, Nov 
1971, Ryan 43. NEW SouTH WALES: Boonoo Boonoo, Feb 1905, Boorman; Gibraltar Range; 
May 1961, Constable NSW 56665, 


Mueller based his description of M. aotoides on a single plant collected from 
the Burnett Ranges but later he referred another specimen (Mt Mitchell, N.S.W., 
Beckler—duplicate at Kew) to it. In this he was followed by Bentham, and the 
name M. aoteides came into general use for the Mt Mitchell plant which is in 
fact a distinct species, M. confertiflora. 


M, aotoides is widely spread in Queensland but is nowhere common, It is 
so like a species of Aofus in all characters except the longitudinal dissepiment in 
the ovary and seed that one might speculate on the desirability of uniting the 
genera Aotus and Mirbelia. 


Mirbelia aotoides F. Muell., Trans. Phil. Inst. Vict. 3:53 (1859), Fragm. 4:12 
(1863); Benth., Fi. Aust. 2:35 (1864). Types Burnett Ranges, Mueller 
(MEL, holo; BRI, photo) 


NorTH KENNeEpY District: Paluma Range, 19°S 145°S’E, Sep 1963, Vessey. MIrcHELL 
Districr: between Torrens Creek and Pentland, Oct 1935, Priest (North Queensland Natur- 
alists’) Club 824). LeicHHArpr Districr: Mt Playfair Station, in 1956, Biddulph 38; 
Glinghinda, ca 60 km N of Taroom, Oct 1963, Speck 1873: Carnarvon Range, Oct 1933, 
White 9464. Dariinc Downs Districr: Miles, Jun 1946, White Herb, Aust. 1159, Sep 
1961, Pediey 887; Chinchilla area, Sep 1954, Emerson, BurRnetr District: Hungry Hills 
between Eidsvold and Mt Perry, jul 1956, Coaldrake, 


Mirbelia speciosa Sicb. ex DC, subsp. rimgrosei (F, M. Bailey) Pedley, comb. et 
stat. nov. Based on M. ringrosei F. M. Bailey, Qd Ag. J, 16:189 
(1905). Type: Herberton, Aug 1905, Ringrose (BRI, holo) 


Coox Disrricr: Mt Windsor, Mar 1941, Carr, LeicHHarpr Disrricr: Blackdown 
Tableland, ca 23°50S 149°E, Apr 1971, Henderson, Andrews & Sharpe H609 & H744, Sep 
1971, Henderson, Durrington & Sharpe H1207; Carnarvon Ranges, Jul 1937, Yourg. 
DarLtinc Downs Districr: Fairyland §.F.R. 42, Jul 1948, Anderson, MoRETON Disrricr: 
Crows Nest, Oct 1921, White, Sep 1922, Kenny, May & Oct 1924, Hrass 18; Helidon- 
Ravensbourne road, Sep 1961, Hockings & Cockburn; 6 miles [10 km] N of Helidon, Aug 
1963, Pedley 1380, Sep 1963, Pedley 1400. 


STYLOSANTHES SWARTZ 


Following a revision of Stylosanthes by Mohlenbrock (1958) and a review 
of Malesian species by Nooteboom in van Mecuwen ef al (1961) there has been 
some controversy about the identity of S. sundaica Taub. Mohlenbrock treated 
S, sundaica as a synonym of S. humilis HBK., Townsville stylo. Nooteboom not 
only treated the two as distinct, but placed them in different sections of the 
genus, S. sundaica in sect. Styosanthes and S. /rumilis in sect. Stylosanthes. 
Mohlenbrock (1963), without any discussion, accepted Nooteboom’s interpreta- 
tion of S. sundaica. More recently °t Mannetje (1968) received the problem and 
suggested that detailed taxonomic studies be carried out. 


Through the courtesy of the Director of Herbarium Bogorense I examined 
Malesian material of S. sundaica and material of S. fusmilis from Australia and 
New Guinea in the Queensland Herbarium. 


38 


Plants from Malesia (excluding Papua) usually have two inner bracteoles, 
and in one case (van Steenis 7357) a rudimentary floral axis. In all other 
characters (vegetative, floral and fruiting) the Malesian and Australian plants 
are indistinguishable. In general appearance plants of S. sundaica grown in the 
open at Brisbane look very like the “Katherine” and ‘Pretty Beach” strains of 
S. Aumilis grown under controlled environmental conditions at Canberra (Downes 
et al, 1967). When grown in the open at Gayndah (latitude 25°5°) and 
Brisbane 5. sundaica, or at least the strain grown, does not flower. This is 
not inconsistent with the behaviour of the late maturing types of Townsville 
stylo naturalized in Australia (Cameron, 1967). 


I agree with Nooteboom’s observations on 5. sundaica and on the deficiencies 
of Mohlenbrock’s (1958) paper, but I do not believe that the evidence presented 
justifies the recognition of S. sundaica as a distinct taxon. It is merely a variant 
of the extremely variable S. humilis, not worthy of even varietal rank. Mohlen- 
brock’s description of S, humilis, however, should be amended to include plants 
which often have two bracteoles and rarely a caducous rudimentary floral axis. 
It may then be regarded as being somewhat transitional between the two sections, 
as Mohlenbrock has already treated S. sericeiceps S. F. Blake. The fact that the 
presence of a rudimentary floral axis and a second inner bracteole is used to 
distinguish the two sections of Stylosanthes does not give these characters any 
special properties and make them any less liable to variation at least within 
some species, 


Stylosanthes humilis which is well adapted to dispersal by animal and man 
was probably introduced from eastern Brazil into Malesia in post-Columbian 
times, probably by Portuguese in the 16th century. Merrill (1954) discussed the 
significance of the Portugal-Brazil-Cape of Good Hope-East Indies trade route. 
S. humilis is an extremely plastic species, as is demonstrated by the behaviour 
of the plants naturalized in Queensland (Cameron, 1965) which probably have 
been derived from few introductions and the variant with the rudimentary floral 
axis and second bracteole could either have been the original strain introduction 
to Malesia or it could have arisen since. 


TEPHROSIA PERS. 


The genus Tephrosia in Australia is in need of revision, Some preliminary 
studies have been made and it is intended that eventually at least a review of 
the Australian species will be prepared. In the interim the following new com- 
binations are made and species described: 


Tephrosia spechtii Pedley, nom. et stat. nov. Based on T. purpurea (L.) Pers. 
var. axillaris Bak. f., J. Bot. 64:91 (1926). Type: Groote Eylandt, 
Brown ‘4115’ (kK, isosyn) 


NORTHERN ‘TERRITORY: Hemple Bay, Groote Eylandt, May 1948, Specht 373; Bickerton 
I, Jun 1948, Specht 620. 


Tephrosia rufula Pedley, nom. et stat. nov. Based on T. purpurea (1..) Pers. var. 
rufescens Benth., Fl. Aust. 2:210 (1864). Type: Gorman Creek, 
Moreton Bay, Stuart (ex herb. Mueller) (K, lecto, designated here) 


T. brachyodon Domin var, rufescens (Benth.) Domin, Biblio. Bot. 89:198 
(1926). Based on 7. purpurea var, rufescens Benth. 


39 


QUEENSLAND: LErIcHHARDT Districr: Springsure, Oct 1933, Whife 9451; Isla Gorge, 
ca 28 kim SW of Theodore, Aug 1973, Sharpe & Hockings 515, BurNerr District: Dillarnel, 
Dec 1939, Smith 637; “Narayen”, Feb 1967, Tothill N339, Crawford Hill, Nov 1947, Michael 
3038. Moreron Disrrict; Petrie, Novy 1931, Blake 2893; Pine Mountain, 27°29'S 142° 
446, Jul 1972, Durringen & Thomas 724, Goodna, Jun 1930, White 6770; Enoggera 
near Brisbane, Oct 1930, White 7342, 


Tephrosia benthamii Pedley, nom. et. stat. nov. Based on T. rosea F. Muell. ex 
Benth. var. (?) angustifolia Benth., Fl. Aust. 2:2111 (1864). Type: 
between Darling and Cooper Creek, Neilson (K, holo) 


QUEENSLAND: GREGORY Nortu Districr: “Coolane” ca 32 km W of Winton, Oct 1956, 
Bisset. Warreco District: “Curragh” near Cunnamulla, Jan 1931, Hubbard & Winders 
6216; Charleville, Oct 1945, Clemens. 


Tephrosia delestangii Pedley, species nova affinis 7. polyzygae F. Muell. ex Benth. 
foliolis paucioribus latioribus, inflorescentiis densioribus et leguminibus 
angustioribus differt. Typus: Latz 1835 in NT 31511 (BRI, holotypus). 


Suffrutex ramosissimus foliaceus griseus usque 0°5 m altus; ramuli indumento pilorum 
rectorum appressorum argenteorum usque 1 mm longorum obsiti; stipulae lineares persistentes 
3~6mm longae. Folio (9~)13—29-foliata; rhachis (25—)35—-75 mm longa (petiolo 7—12. 
(-10) mm longo incluso), dense pubescens; foliola obovato-oblonga vel cuneata, obtusa, 
truncata vel leviter retusa, 8~16mm longa, 3-6mm lata, 2°3—2-8—-plo longiora quam lata, 
foliclo terminali interdum 9mm lata et 1:5—plo longioro quam lata, discoloria indumento 
pilorum brevium debillium erectorum sparsorum supra indumento pilorum longiorium 
-appressorium argenteorum plerumque densorum infra obsita, 4-5 nervis lateralibus conspicuis, 
praecipue conspicius in pagina supero praedita. Flores in pares in pseudoracemis 4~7—nodis 
ferminalibus vel in axillas superas dispositi; pedicelli 2-2-5 mm longi; calyx dense appresse 
pubescens tubo quam lobus inferus longiore, 1-5-2 mm longo, lobo supero (bifido ad circa 
medium) et laterale 1:5-1-8mm longo, lobo infero 2—2-5.mm longo instructus. Corolla 
aurantiaca; vexillum tomentosum dorsale, 4mm longum, 4-4-5 mm latum, ungue 1:2~1:5 mm 
longo; alae quam carina longiores 4mm longae, 2 mm latae unguibus 1-2 mm longis; carina 
interdum leviter pubescens apicem versus circa 3mm longa, 1-5-2mm lata, ungue eum 
alarum aequanti; ovarium dense appresse pubescens, 8—10-—-ovalatum; stylus glaber planus. 
Legumen rectum vel apice interdum sursum, appresse pubescens, 35-40 mm longum; 3-3-5 mm 
latum. Semina brunnea subcylindrica 2-2:-2mm longa, 1:7~2mm diam; arillus nullus. 


Much-branched leafy grey subshrub to 0:5 m tall; branchlets with dense 
indumentum of straight silvery hairs to 1mm long; stipules linear persistent 
3-6mm long. Leaves (9—)13-29-foliolate; rachis (25-)35~75 mm _ long 
Gincluding petiole 7-12(—20) mm long), densely pubescent; leaflets obovate— 
oblong or cuneate, obtuse, truncate or slightly retuse, 8-16mm long, 3-6 mm 
wide, 2-3~2-8 times as long as wide, the terminal leaflet sometimes 9 mm wide 
and 1-5 times as long as wide, discolorous, upper surface with indumentum of 
sparse weak short erect hairs, lower with indumentum of usually dense appressed 
longer silvery hairs, 4—5 lateral nerves conspicuous, especially on upper surface. 
Flowers in pairs in 4-7—noded terminal pseudoracemes 5—9 cm long or rarely in 
pairs in upper axils; pedicels 2-2-5 mm long; calyx densely appressed pubescent, 
the tube shorter than the lower lobe, 1-5-2 mm long, upper lobe (bifid to about 
the middle) and lateral lobes 1-5-1-8 mm long; lower lobe 2—2-5 mm long, 
Corolla orange; standard tomentose on the back, 4mm long, 4:5—5 mm wide 
on claw 1+2-1-5 mm long; wings longer than the keel, 4mm long, 2mm wide, 
on claw 1-2 mm long; keel sometimes slightly pubescent near the apex, ca 3 mm 
long, 1:5—2 mm wide on claw as long as that of the wings; ovary densely appressed 
pubescent, 8-10 ovulate; style flat, glabrous. Pod straight or sometimes upturned 
at the apex, appressed pubescent, 35-40 mm long, 3-3:5 mm wide. Seeds brown, 
subcylindrical 2-2-2 mm long, 1-7-2 mm diam.; aril none. 


40 


Northern Territory: Stuart Highway, Daly Waters turn-off, Feb 1969, Mfust 432 (BRI); 
Daly Waters, Mar 1972, Byrnes 2501 (BRI); 50 miles [80 km] 8 of Borroloola road junction, 
McArthur River, ca 17°18’S, 135°37’E, Jun 1971, Leatz 1535 (BRI). Queensland: BurKE 
District: Adels Grove, 130 km NNE of Camooweal, Feb 1946, de Lestang (BRI). 


T, delestangii has been collected in only three rather widely separated 
localities. It occurs on skeletal soils on hillsides. 


Tephrosia virens Pedley, sp. nov. affinis T. spechtii Pedley et T. macrocarpae 
Benth. ab illa foliolis paucioribus grandioribus a hac foliolis saepe 
paucioribus infra pubescentibus sine mucrone nervis paucioribus 
lateralibus et inflorescentiis axillaribus differt. Typus: Lavery 19 (BRI, 
holotypus). 


Frutex virella usque 2m altus; ramuli angulares mox teretes sericei vel interdum 
glabrati; stipulae lineares 2-4mm longae. Folia 3-vel minus plerumque 5-~foliolata; axis 
sericeus, 6-18 (—28) mm longus (petiolo 5—13{—16) mm longo incluso) folioli anguste obovati 
vel obovati, obtusi vel aliquando retusi, 20~35 mm longi, 5~15 mm lati, 2~4-4—plo longiora 
quam latum, foliolo interdum grandiori, supra glabri vel indumento pilorum sparsorum 
brevium appressorum et infra pilorum brevium appressorum obsita; 4-8 nervi laterales 
conspicui; petiolulus 1:5-2-Smm longus dense sericeus. Flores 1-7 in gricibus axillaribus 
apparenter sessilibus vel perspicue racemosis, axe post lapsum florium manifeste cicairicata, 
1:-4mm longo. Corolla aurantiaca vel aurantiaco-ruber; vexillum dorsale tomentosum, 
4-56 mm longum, 7-10 mm latum ungue I[:5—-3mm longo; alae carinam fere aequantes 
46mm longae, 2:5-4mm latae ungue 2-2-5 mm longo; carina 4-5 mm longa, 2~3 mm 
lata ungue 2~3.mm longo. Calyx appresse pubescens; tubus 1-8-2 mm longus, lobus inferus 
~~ subulatus, 2-5-4 mm longus, lobi laterali 2-2-5 mm longi et lobus superus 2-3 mm longus 
ad circa medium bifus. Ovarium sericeum, 8-9 ovulatum; stylus planus glaber, Legumen 
planum sursum apice sparse appresse pubescens 5—6cm longum, 4~5 mm latum, 6~9— sperum. 
Semina lenticula circa 3-4 mm longa, 2-2-5 mm lata, sine arillo, 


Greenish shrub to 2 m tall; branchlets angular becoming terete, sericeous or 
sometimes glabrate; stipules linear 2-4 mm long. Leaves 3— or less commonly 
5—foliolate; axis sericeous, 6—18(—28) mm long (including petiole 5—-12(—16) mm 
long), leaflets narrowly obovate or obovate, obtuse or occasionally retuse, 
19—35 mm long, 5-15 mm wide, 2-4-4 times as long as wide, the terminal one 
sometimes larger, upper surface glabrous or with indumentum of sparse short 


appressed hairs, lower surface always with indumentum of sparse appressed hairs, _ 


4.8 lateral veins conspicuous; periolule 1:5-2:S’mm Tong, densely sericeous, 
Flowers in groups of 1-7 in the axils apparently sessile or distinctly racemose 
the axis conspicuously scarred after flowers have fallen, 1-4mm long. Corolla 
orange or orange-red; standard tomentose on the back, 4:5-6 mm long, 7-10 mm 
wide on claw 1:5--3 mm long; wings as long as, or slightly longer than, the keel, 
3:4-6mm long, 2-5-4 mm wide on claw 2—2-5 mm long; keel 4-5 mm long, 
2—3 mm wide on claw 2~3 mm long. Calyx appressed pubescent; tube 1-8-2 mm 
long, lower lobe + subulate, 2-5-4 mm long, lateral lobes 2-2-5 mm long and 
upper lobe, 2—3 mm long bifid to about the middle. Ovary sericeous, 8—9 
ovulate; style flat glabrous. Pod flat upturned at end, sparsely appressed pubescens, 
5-6cm long, 4-5 mm wide, 6-9 seeded. Seeds lenticular, ca 3-4 mm long, 
2-2-5 mm wide, without an aril, 


Western Australia: Liveringa, Fitzroy River, Apr 1927, Ewart comm. Gardner (KK). 
Northern Territory: 61 km from Tanami towards Gordon Downs, 19° 41'S, 129° 25’ B, 
Aug 1971, Gittins 2369 (BRI); 21 miles NW of Wavehill police station, Jun 1949, Perry 
& Lazarides 2854 (BRI, K)}; 52 miles N of Tennant Creek, Apr 1948, Per. ry 634 (BRI, K); 
Limbunya, 17° 18’S, 129° 45'E, Apr 1974, Dunlop 3510 (BRI). Queensiand: BuRKE 
Districr: 107 miles (170 km) from Camooweal on road to Burketown, Jun 1966, Pedley 
2055 (BRI, K); Mt. Isa, Mar 1949, McFarlane (BRI), Oct 1974, Specht & Rogers 96 
(BRI), Jan 1958, Lavery 19; Adels Grove, 130 km NNE of Camooweal, Feb 1947, de Lestang 
197 (BRI); 14 miles SW of “Kamileroi” Stn, Aug 1953, Lazarides 3973 (BRI, K); Lawn 
Hill, May 1940, Jensen 66 (BRI). 


41 


In the eastern part of its range 7. virens occurs on shallow soils with high 
levels of copper but collectors’ notes indicate that in the Northern Territory it is 
found on shallow soils derived from sandstone and limestone, unlikely to be high 
in copper, 


Bibliography 


Benson, L. (1941). The Mesquites and Screw-beans of the United States. Amer. J. Bot. 
28 :748-754, 


BENTHAM, G. (1841}. Notes on Mimoseae, with a short synopsis of Species. J. Bor. 
(Hooker) 4:323-417. 


Brack, J. M. (1920), Additions to the flora of South Australia, No. 18, Trans, & Proc, Roy. 
Soc, South Australia 44:374-378. 


BRENAN, J. P. M. (1967), Leguminosae subfam. Caesalpinioideae in E. Milne-Redhead & 
R. M. Polhill (ed.) Flora of Tropical East Africa. Crown Agents for Overseas 
Governments and Administrations, London, 


Burkart, A. (1940). Materiales para una monografia del genero “Prosopis”. Darwiniana 
4:57-128. 


CAMERON, D. F. (1965). Variation in flowering time and in some growth characteristics 


ef Townsville tucerne (Stylosanthes humilis), Aust. J. Exper. Agric. Anim. 
Husband. 5:49, 


CAMERON, D, F. (1967). Flowering in Townsville Lucerne (Stylosanthes humilis), I. Studies 
in controlled environments. Aust. J. Exper. Agric. Anim. Husband. 7:489-494. 


Downes, R. W., STAPLES, I. B., CoLMAn, P. A. & PepLey, L. (1967). The effect of day- 
length and temperature on the growth and reproduction of six strains of Townsville 
lucerne (Stylosanthes fuanilis), Ausi, J, Exper, Agric, Anim, Husband, 7:351-356, 


GRAHAM, J. D, (1960). Morphological variation in mesquite (Prosopis, Leguminosae) 
the lowland of north-eastern Mexico. South-west Nat. 4:187-193. 


HATTINK, T. A. (1974). A revision of Malesian Caesalpinea, including Mesonenron (Legum- 
inosae-Caesalpianaceae). Reinwardtia 9:1-69. 


Hurcuinson, J. (1964), The Genera of Flowering Plants. Dicotyledones. Vol. 1, Oxford 
University Press, London, 


Tounston, M. ©, (1962). The North American mesquite Prosopis sect. Algarobia (Legum- 
inosae) Brittonia 14:72-90. 


“t MANNETJE, L. (1968). Stylosanthes sundaica Taub. Plant introduction Rey. §(2):3. 


Marecuat, R. & Bauprtr, J. C. (1974). Deaux combinations nouvelles dans la genre 
Macrop tilttim Urb. (Papilionaceae). Bull, Jard, Bot, Nat. Belg, 44:443-444, 


MEEUWEN, M, S. VAN, Nooresoom, H. P. & Sreenis, C. G. G. J. vAN (1961). Preliminary 
revisions of some genera of Malaysian Papilionaceae I. Reinwardtia 5:419-456, 


Merritt, FE. D. (1954). The Botany of Cook’s Voyages. Chronica Botanica 
14(5/6):164-384. 


MoBLENBROCK, R, H. (1958). A revision of the genus Stylosanthes. Ann, Miss. Bot. Gard. 
44:299-355, 


MoOHLENBROCK, R. H. (1963). Further considerations in Stylosanthes (Leguminosae) 
Ritodora 65:245-258, 


Pepiey, L. (1973). The names of come legumes cultivated in Queensland. Od J. Agric. 
Anim, Sct. 30; 195-197, 


ROWELL, C. M. gr. (1969). The taxonomy and phytogeography of Prosopis L. in J. L. 
Shuster (ed,), Literature on the mesquite (Prosopis L.} of North America. Texas 
Tech, Univ., Lubbock, Texas. 


SCHMITZ, A. (1972). Contribution palynologique 4 la taxonomiie des Bauhiniege (Caesalp- 
injaceae) Bull. Jard. Bot. Nat. Belg, 43:369-423, 


bE Wir, H. C. BD. (1956). A revision of Malaysian Baulineae, Reinwardtia 3:381-539. 


42 . 


Addendum 


Burkart’s treatment of Prosopis (J. Arnold Arbor. vol. 57. 1976) differs 
to some extent from the one presented here. P. pallida HBK. and P. limensis 
Benth. are treated as being conspecific, with White 2390 being cited under 
P. pallida. Everist 5902 which I have referred to P. flexuosa is cited by Burkart 
under P. velutina. The specimen (in fruit) is however a good match for 
Wedermann 455 (K, in flower) referred by Burkart to P. flexuosa. 


spomguaste “+ cedure cQRRS PIE npn Reman 


cpeepaghamaeeereed tt te 


sci QO TATRA SLE UIST ote 


Austrobaileya 1 (1): 43-46 (1977) 


ALLOSYNCARPIA TERNATA, A NEW GENUS AND 
SPECIES OF MYRTACEAE SUBFAMILY 
LEPTOSPERMOIDEAE FROM NORTHERN AUSTRALIA 


By S. T. Blake* 


Queensland Herbarium, Brisbane 


Summary 


Allosynearpia §. ‘T. Blake with one species A. ternata S. T. Blake has flowers partly 
fused into small heads, circumsciss calyx-tube, many free stamens, 2—celled ovary with hori- 


zontal ovules, I-seeded capsules, large seeds with large much convoluted cotyledons and 
unique branched septate hairs. 


In 1955 Mr. W. Bateman then Forest Officer at Darwin collected a specimen 
with flowers partly connate in small heads and old infructescences of a tree in the 
northern part of the Northern Territory that could not be reconciled with any 
known genus of the Myrtaceae to which family the species certainly belonged, but 
the “fruits” appeared so abnormal that it could not certainly be determined 
whether the mature fruit was dry or fleshy; these structures eventually proved to 
be the connate lower parts of the calyx-tubes from which sced and endocarp had 
fallen away. Bateman collected other material including wood samples but this 
did not resolve the doubt. The structure of the wood also could not be recon- 
ciled with that of any known genus. Mr. L. Beens who succeeded Mr. Bateman 
collected abundant flowering material from another locality in 1965 but it 
remained for Mr. N. Byrnes to collect good fruiting specimens with secd in 1972 
before the relationships of the species could be satisfactorily studied. 


As byproducts of the search for relationships the nature of the hairs found 
in some genera was examined, a reinvesligation of the floral structure of Hucalypt- 
opsis was carried out, and embryos from some genera were studied. 


Allosyncarpia S, T. Blake; genus novum ob fiores fructusque sessiles in capitulis 
partim connatos Syacarpiam Ten. revocat, ob calycis tubum supia 
ovarium circumscissum atque stamina pernumerosa partim deflexa 
atque seminis solitarii formam Eucalyptopsem C, T. White simulans, 
quoad ovula seminaque horizontalia, folia terna ab utraque differt et 
ob inflorescentiam elongatum pills ramosis dense indutam insigna. 


Flores hermaphroditi. Tubus calycis + turbinatus supra ovarium productus, post 
anthesin pars libera circumscissa; lobi 5S herbacei latissime triangulares. Petala 5 trullato- 
ovato basi latiuscula subcuneata vix unguiculata, sepalis longiora, Stamina pernumerosa 
libera in secriebus pluribus dense congesta petalis longiora exteriora in alabastro interiora 
semper deflexa; antherae subquadratae versatiles connectivo parvo loculis parallelis longitud- 
inalitor dehiscentibus, Ovarium omnino adnatum apice leviter convexum plabrum circum 


* Died 24 February (973. 


44 


stylum haud depressum, 2-loculare; ovula 6-10 campylotropa, crassa, horizontalia, peltata; 
placenta lata haud crassa in medium dissepimentum fere omnino adnata. Stylus teres calycem 
haud superans glaber; stigma parvum. Fructus semisuperus capsularis apice dehiscens 2 
valvis loculo altera fere semper abortivo; post dehiscentiam exocarpii pars libera mox tandem 
etiam endocarpium totum secedentia. Semen wnicum depresse ovoideum, horizontale, pelt- 
atum hilo magno; terta tenuis; embryo semen implens; cotyledones cornei, crassi inaequales; 
radicula brevissima—-Arbor sempervirens perulis carens; folia terna, dorsiventralia, pellu- 
cido-punctata, pinnatim nervosa vena intra-marginali distincta; flores parvi sessiles 3(—5) 
nim capitata parte inferiore connati, capitulis pedunculatis in racemis laxis elongatis vel 
paniculis angustis terminalibus vel etiam axillaribus dispositis; inflorescentia tota pilis minimis 
ramosis septatis dense tomentosa. 


Species typica adhuc unica A. ternata S. T, Blake Australiae septentrionales incola. 


Flowers hermaphrodite. Calyx-tube <: turbinate, produced above the ovary, 
the free part circumsciss after flowering; lobes 5 herbaceous very broadly triangu- 
lar. Petals 5 trullate ovate with a relatively broad subcuncate base, longer than 
the sepals. Stamens very numerous closely packed in several series, longer than 
the petals, all deflexed in bud, the inner ones persistently so; anthers subquadrate, 
versatile, with a small connective and parallel cells opening throughout in 
longitudinal slits. Ovary entirely adnate, slightly convex and glabrous on top, 
not depressed around the style, 2-locular; ovules 6-10 campylotropous, thick, 
horizental, on an adnate scarcely thickened placenta about the middle of the 
dissepiment, Styles terete not exserted, glabrous; stigma small. Fruit semisuperior, 
capsular loculicidally dehiscing at the apex into 2 valves, one cell usually 
abortive; endocarp of the free part soon falling at length followed by the separa- 
tion of the entire endocarp. Seed 1, depressed ovoid, horizontal, peltate with a 
large hilum; testa thin; embryo filling the seed; cotyledons horny thick, unequal; 
radicule very short; phimule undeveloped.—-Evergreen tree without bud scales; 
leaves ternate, dorsiventral, punctate, pinnately veined with a distinct intra- 
marginal vein; flowers small, sessile, connate by their lower parts into heads of 
3, the heads pedunculate, in long loose terminal or also axillary racemes or 
panicles, the whole inflorescence densely tornentose with very small irregularly 
branched septate hairs. 


Type and only species: A. ternata S. T. Blake from northern Australia. 


Allosyncarpia ternata S$. T. Blake, species nova adhuc unica. Typus: Beens 
30 prope Oenpelli in Australia boreali lectum (BRI, holotypus) atque 
Byrnes 2443 (BRI paratypus). 


Arbor usque ad 18m alta cirtice griseo rimoso induta, surculis perjuvenilibus inflores- 
centiaque exceptis glabra. Folia ternata breviter vel brevissime petiolata; petiolis 1-10 mm 
longis; laminae coriaceae, anguste ovate vel anguste - ellipticae, acntae vel acuminatae, basi 
acutae, supra + nitidae infra pallidiores obscurioresque, vena intramarginali a margina 
incrassato 0-5-0-9mm distanti atque utrinsecus costam nervis lateralibus primariis 16-22 
praeditae hi cum costa angulum 450°-60° facientes fere recti atque venis secundariis minus 
regularibus et reticulationibus prominentibus interpositi, pro more 7°5—-llcem longae 
1:2—2-8cem latae et 3°5-6 nim longiores quam latiores. Inflorescentia angusta, laxa, 
racemiformia vel paniculata, 10-17-mm longa, pilis minutis, ramosis septatis cano albido- 
tomentosa; rami pedunculique inferne temi sursum oppositi bracteati bracteis caducissimis; 
pedunculi 5-10mm longi apicem versus par bractearum primo gerentes; bracteolae (?) 
minimae ad flores laterale adnatae. Flores sessiles 3-ni uniseriati, ad apicem ovariorum 
connati. Calyx turbinato-campanulatus, + 4mm longus, tomentosus, supra ovarium longius 
productus post anthesin circumscissus; sepala 5 latissime triangularia acuta et + acuminata, 
1-2—1-3.mm longa + 1-3 mm lata. Petala 5 late trullato ovata, tomentosa et ciliata, punctata, 
venulosa sepalis longiora 1:5-2 mm longa. Stamina § seriata, 2-4mm longa in alabastro 
omnia deflexa, exteriora longiora tandem erecta vel patentia antherae subquadratae 0:4mm 
longae lataeque, dorso fere ad apicem glandula parva gerentes. Ovarium apice leviter 
sonvexum glabrum. Capitula frugifera 3~1 fructus gerentia vel 3-loba vel transverse 
ellipsoidea vel irregulariter globosa, + 10mm alta, usque ad 15mm lata + 5mm crassa. 


45 


Fructus semisuperior parte libera fere semiglobosa sed compressa verrucosa, loculo altero 
abortivo altero monospermo. Semen horizontale, a dorso visum irregulariter ovatum, a latere 
visum subreniforme, - 7-7-5mm longum, 5-6mm latum, 4-5 mm crassuim; testa brunnea 
admodum rugulosum; cotyledones pallidi, punctati. 


Tree up to 18 m high with grey fissured fibrous bark glabrous except for the 
inflorescence and the very young shoots. Leaves ternate, shortly or very shortly 
petiolate; petioles 1-10 mm long; blades coriaceous narrowly ovate or narrowly 
-& elliptic acute or acuminate, acute at the base, somewhat shining above, paler 
and duller beneath, primary lateral veins in about 16~22 pairs at an angle of 
50°-60° with the midrib running nearly straight to the intramarginal vein, with 
several less regular secondary laterals and prominent reticulations between the 
intramarginal vein 0:5—0:9 mm from the outside edge of the thickened margin, 
mostly 7-5~{1 cm long and 1-2~2:8 cm wide, mostly 3-5—6 times as long as wide; 
reversion shoots? subsessile, only 3 times as long as wide. 


Inflorescence narrow, racemiform or paniculate 10-17cm long densely 
whitish tomentose with minute branched septate hairs; branches and peduncles 
ternate or sometimes opposite above with very early caducous bracts near the top 
and two pairs of minute bracteoles (?) nearly entirely adnate to calyx tube of the 
lateral flowers; no terminal peduncle. Flowers sessile 3~nate in a linear series 
connate for about 3 their length (to the top of the ovaries), Calyx turbinate 
campanulate + 4mm long, 3-5—4 mm wide at top, tomentose, the tube produced 
above the ovary for 1-1-5 mm and circumsciss at the level of the ovary after 
anthesis; sepals 5 very broadly triangular acute and =: acuminate, +: 1:2-1:3 mm 
long, + 1:5 mm wide. Petals 5 broadly trullate ovate, tomentose, ciliate, dotted 
and venulose, longer than the sepals, 1-5-2 mm long. 


Stamens in about 5 series, 2—~4mm long, all deflexed in bud, the inner 2 
series remaining so at anthesis. Anthers 0:4mm long and wide with a small 
subapical gland at the back. Ovary slightly convex and glabrous on top; style 
slightly swollen in the middle half. Fruiting heads + 3-lobed when 3 fruits 
mature or transversely ellipsoid or irregularly globose when 1 or 2 fail to mature, 
-+ 10mm high up to 15 mm wide, -— 5 mm thick. Fruits semisuperior, the free 
part about semiglobose but compressed laterally, one cell abortive, the other 
_with one seed, at length falling from the calyx tube after the seed has been shed 
leaving only the united bases of the calyx tube, persistent on the peduncle. 


Seed horizontal depressed ovoid as viewed from above, somewhat reniform 
in side view, = 7-7-5 mm long, 5-6 mm wide and 4—5 mm thick, testa brown, 
somewhat rugose; cotyledons pallid, dotted. | 


Worthern Territory: Darwin & GuLr Disrreicr: 16 miles NE of Oenpelli, bank of 
Birraduk Ck, in fringing forest, 60 m, Novy 1965, Beens 30 (wood sample W.107), (1. f., bk.); 
Waterfall Ck, South Alligator R, on creek bank, Jan 1972, Byrnes 2443, (ir); springs 
along headwaters of South Alligator R., Jun 1936, Rateman (old infructescences) and same 
loc.? in 1955, Bateman (1. fl, weathered remains of fr.)}; South Alligator R. (?same loc.) 
Nov-Dec 1959, Bateman (1. fl.). 


The outstanding characters of Allosyncarpia are the elongated panicles or 
racemes of small heads of partly connate flowers with the calyx-tube produced 
above the ovary and this free part circumsciss after anthesis falling with the 
entire sepals and the very numerous free stamens in several continuous series 
the outer of which are about as long as the petals, the 2-celled ovary with 
comparatively few horizontal ovules, the semi-superior connate loculicidally 
dehiscent usually l-—seeded fruits with finally deciduous endocarp and upper 
part of exccarp and plump peltate but horizontal seed with large broad much 


46 


contorted cotyledons nearly hiding the short radicle, and the peculiar branched 
septate hairs in the inflorescence unlike any other hairs observed or reported 
for the Myrtaceae. The partly connate capitate flowers with free sepals and 
petals and connate fruits recall Syncarpia and the calyx tube circumsciss above 
the ovary, stamens densely packed in several series with the inner ones persistently 
deflexed, 2-celled ovary and usually solitary large plump peltate seed suggest 
some relationship with Eucalyptopsis, while the ovary is not depressed around 
the style in any of them. Syncarpia and Eucalyptopsis have opposite leaves, 
very different inflorescences, simple non-septate hairs or none at all and erect 
seeds, while Syncarpia also has a persistent calyx, 1—2 seriate stamens, 3—locular 
ovary, many ovules erect from a basal placenta, narrow seeds with a basal hilum 
and radicle about half as long as the cotyledons, and conspicuous bud-scales. 
On the other hand Euvcalyptopsis has the flowers free in the head with entirely 
adnate sepals shed together with the tightly appressed petals as a calyptra, peltate 
placenta, less twisted cotyledons, (7?) persistent pericarp and no intramarginal 
vein in the leaves, 


Eucalyptopsis C. T. White, J. Arnold Arb, 32:139-141, Pl. I (1951), 
was described as having an irregularly lobed calyx, no petals and stamens in 
four groups, but it is now clear that the single flower available has split during 
drying. The material now available shows that the sepals are entirely adnate in 
the bud as a very short broad calyptra which is somewhat irregularly circumsciss 
immediately above the stamens and often remains attached by a small part 
to one side of the expanded flower; there are four imbricate petals tightly 
appressed to one another and to the sepals and falling with them. The structure 
of the operculum and its adherence in the open flower recalls that of Eucalyptus 
ferminalis and related species. The very numerous stamens are crowded in 
about five continuous series. White suggested that its closest ally was Pleuro- 
calyptus Brogn. & Gris. from New Caledonia which has a somewhat similar 
calyptrate calyx tending to split into irregular lobes, but the calyx-tube is 
persistent and the petals persist on the open flower while the arrangement of 
the stamens in one series opposite the sepals and more than one opposite 
the petals, the almost superior (perigynous) 4—5—celled ovary with a depression 
around the style and bifid basal placentas with marginal ovules as well as the 
alternate leaves set this genus apart from any of the others considered in 
this paper; the hairs are simple and non-septate. 


Eucalyptopsis is perfectly glabrous but Syncarpia is more or less pubescent 
at least on very young shoots and the top of the ovary with simple non-septate 
hairs. Choricarpia Domin, based on Syncarpia leptopetala F. Muell. and 
originally distinguished from Syncarpia because of the free though densely packed 
flowers with only 20 stamens and 2-celled ovary with a solitary erect (base) 
ovule in each cell has 2—armed hairs with a short central stalk (malpighiaceous 
hairs) as in the South American Calyptranthes and Marlieria of the Myrtoideae. 
Bentham followed Mueller’s placement of Syncarpia with some misgiving and 
with the suggestion that it might prove to be generically distinct, in Benth. 
& Hook., Gen. Pl. 1:709 (1865), Fi. Aust. 3:266 (1867) and J. Linn. Soc. 
Bot. 10:145-6 (1867). Baillon referred the species wrongly determined as 
Syncarpia laurifolia to a new monotypic section of Metrosideros, Metrosideros 
sect, Sarcynpia Baill. Hist. Pl. 6,362, 363 (1877). A second species C. subar- 
gentea (C, T. White) L. Johnson (Syncarpia subargentea C. T. White and 
S. subargentea C. 'T, White var. latifolia.C. T. White) has similar. 2~armed 
hairs but I have not seen ripe fruits or seeds of either. The genus further differs 
from Syncarpia in having no bud-scales. 


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Austrobaileya 1 (1): 47-48 (1977) 


THE GENUS VERTICORDIA (MYRTACEAE) IN NORTHERN 
| AUSTRALIA 


By N. B. Byrnes 


Queensland Herbarium, Brisbane 


Summary 


Two new species of Verticordia, WV. decussata and V. 


ECH » Geen. verticillata from Northern 
Australia are described and some notes on distribution are given. 


The genus Verticordia is generally restricted to the south western part of 
Australia and in “Flora Australtensis”, Bentham listed only one species, V. cun- 


ninghanui Schau, north of latitude 18°S. A further two taxa have been found 
north of this latitude. 


Verticordia decussata S$, T. Blake ex N. Byrnes, sp. nov. affinis V. cunninghamii 


Schau. sed foliis decussatis valde confertis et floribus parvioribus differt 
Typus: Dunlop 3652 (BRI, holotypus; DNA, isotypus ). 


Frutex patulus usque ad 2m altus. Felia decussata, valde conferta 
rectangularia, 1-2-5 mm longa ca 0-4mm lata, obtusa, punctata, supra profunde canaliculat 
Flores albi, axillares in pedicellos breves. Bracteolae caducae, alabastrum includentes ca 3 ithe 
longae, unaquae que carina distincta in acumen desinens, Calycis tubus costis 10 interdum 
haud prominentibus. Lobi calycis ad 5mm dongi, divaricate ramosi. Petala Jate ovata 
irregulariter serrata, ca 3mm longa. Stamina et staminodia ca 2mm longa. Stylus conicus 


ca 5mm longus, annulo ciliorum infra apicem, Ovarium uniloculare placentatione basilari 
et ovulis 8-10, Fructus ignott. 


sessilia, coriacea, 


Shrub to 2m high, spreading. Leaves decussate, very crowded, sessile 
coriaceous, rectangular, 1-2-5.mm long, about 0:4 mm_ wide, obtuse, deeply 
channelled above, punctate. Flowers white on short axillary pedicels. Bracteoles 
enclosing bud, about 3mm long, each with a distinct keel ending in a point 
caducous. Calyx tube with 10 ribs, sometimes indistinct. Calyx lIebes to § anit 
long, divaricately branched. Petals broadly ovate, irregularly serrate, about 3 mm 
long. Stamens and staminodes about 2mm long, Style conical, about 5 mm long 


with a ring of cilia below the apex. Ovary unilocular with 8-10 ovules borne 
basally. Fruit unknown. 


Northern Territory: Edith R., 14° 09 S 132° 18 FB Sep 1974 
holo; DNA, iso); above UDP Falls, Jul 1973, Gittins 2693 ROS Bests we 
Nourlangie Rock, Jul 1972, Martensz AB 168 (DNA); Nourlangie Rock Tony 19 ot 
Fox 495 (DNA) & Jul 1972, Byrnes 2760 (DNA); Nourlangie Rock area, Nov 1972 AM, eo 
B776 (DNA); Oenpelli, Oct 1948, Specht 1112 (PERTH). Be tala 


Range. This species is confined to the Northern Territory 


and to date h 
been found south of 15°S latitude. ale nas not 


Habitat. Sandstone areas usually growing in crevices or on shallow sandy soils 


This species has been known for a considerable time but only recently ha 
sufficient collections been made to give a reasonable representation of the Bente 
Dr. S. T. Blake suggested the name and intended to describe the species (Specht 
& Mountford, Am.—Aust. Exp. to Arnhem Land 3:273. 1958) but did not 


continue with the work. The very tightly packed decussately arran 
4 + ’ a . Cc oA 
enable determination of stcrile material. y ged leaves 


48 


Verticordia verticillata N. Byrnes sp, nov. affinis V. cunninghamii Schau. sed 
foliis verticillatis, staminodiis brevioribus et stylo longiori differt. Typus: 
Dunlop 3089 (BRI, holotypus; DNA, isotypus). 


Verticordia cunninghamii Schau. var. longistyla C. A. Gardner. 


Frutex ad 5m altus. Folia verticillata, }inearia, plerumaque falcata, triqnetra, apiculata, 
sessiia 1-3 cm longa, ad 1mm lata, punctata inconspicue. Flores albi, axillares in pedicellos 
ad icm longus plerumgue in panicula frondoso dispositi, Bracteolae caducae, alabasirum 
includentes, ca 5mm longae, carina in acumen distincta desinens. Calycis tubus costis S hand 
prominentibus, Lobi ealycis 6-8 mm longi, divaricate ramosi, Petala ovata, irregulariter 
serrata, 4--6:mm longa. Stamina ca 3mm longa; staminodia ca 2mm longa et ambo longi- 
tudine + partem superantia in tubum conata. Stylus 1—1-2cm longus, pilis apicem versus. 
Ovarium unitloculare, placentatione basilari et ovulis 8-10 in annulo, Fruetus ex calyce 
leviter aucto semine uno continens constatus. 

Shrub to 5m high. Leaves verticillate, linear, usually falcate, triquetrous, 
apiculate, sessile, 1-3 cm long and up to 1 mm wide, inconspicuously punctate. 
Flowers white, axillary on pedicels to 1 cm long and usually in a leafy panicle. 
Bracteoles enclosing the flower buds, about 5 mm long, each with a keel ending 
in a distinct point, caducous. Calyx tube with 5 indistinct ribs. Calyx lobes 
6-8 mm long, divaricately branched. Petals ovate, 4-6 mm long, irregularly serrate. 
Stamens about 3 mm long; staminodes about 2 mm long, both fused together into 
a tube for more than 4 of their length. Style 1-1-2 cm long with hairs below the 
apex. Ovary unilocular with 8-10 ovules borne basally in a ring. Fruit a slightly 
enlarged calyx containing a single seed. 

~ Northern Territory, Eva Valley Stn, 14° 14’ § 133° 00’ E, Oct 1973, Dunlop 3089 
(BRI, holo; DNA, iso); Groote Eylandt, May 1948 Specht (BRI); Oenpelli, Sep 1948, 
Specht 1041 (BRE, PERTH); East Alligator R. area, Aug 1973, Parker 174 (BRI, DNA) 
& Jul 1972, Lazarides 7576 (BRD; c@ 1-5 miles NW of Cannon Hill Airstrip, Aug 1972, 
Martensz AE 248 (BRI); Springvale, Giles (BRI); Adelaide R., Jun 1943, Tyack Bake 
(BRI); Katherine, Musspratt SS0396 (DNA); 20 miles W of Katherine, Sep 1961, Speck 
1661 (BRI, PERTH): Eva Valley Stn, Oct 1973, Robinson EV70 (DNA). Western Australia. 
15° 45° § 128° 44° E, Sep 1970, Scarth-Johnson S57 (BRI); Deception R., Langfield 391 
(PERTH): Wyndham Rd, Sep 1970, Scarth-Johnson 560 (PERTH): near Mt. Hann, Jul 
1921, Gardner (PERTH) tholotype of V. ci#nninghaniii var. longistyla); 14 miles from 
Kununurra on Wyndham Rd., Oct 1966, Thompson 15 (PERTH). 


Range. The northern part of the Northern Tetntoty and the Kimberley area of 
Western Australia. 
Habitat. Gn a wide range of well drained soils in monsoonal areas. 

This species closely resembles V. Cunninghamii in the field and has been 
confused with it in herbaria but differs from it in having verticillate leaves with 
indistinct oil glands, a much longer style and comparitively shorter staminodes. 
Details of these characters were examined on the type material of V. cunninghamii 
(Cunningham’s collection) at Kew by A. Kanis (pers. comm.). This enabled 
the clarification as to which taxon was the undescribed species. 

In C. A. Gardner “Bot. Notes, Kimberley Div. of W.A. 74 (1923)” V. cun- 
ninghamii var. longistyla was described. Examination of the type material revealed 
that it belongs to this taxon. 

Originally the generic description (de Candolle, Prod. 3:208. 1828) included 
only opposite leaves. Bentham (FI. Aust. 3:16, 1866) expanded the description to 
include alternate leaves and now an addition needs to be made to include this 
species with its verticillate leaves. It is typical of the genus in all other characters 
examined. 

V. cunninghamii is the most common species in Northern Australia and 
has the greatest range, extending from the Queensland border near the Nicholson 
R. to the western Kimberley area of Western Australia. 


Austrobaileya | (1): 49-62 (1977) 


POLYCARPAEA (CARYOPHYLLACEAE) IN AUSTRALIA 


By L. PEDLEY 


Queensland Herbarrum, Brisbane 


SUMMARY 


Diagnoses and a key to the twelve species occurring in Australia are given, Taxa 
described for the first time are:—P. arida, P. fallax, P. microphylla, P. coryinbosa var. minor, 
P. corymbosa vat. torrensis and P. spirostylis subsp. compacta, New combinations are: 
P. breviflora var. gracilis (based on P. synandra var. gracilis Benth,), P. spirostylis subsp. 
densiflora and subsp. glabra Coased on P. synaidra var, densifiora Benth, and 2. glabra 
White & Francis respectively). Other names placed in synonymy are: P. brevianthera Ewart 
& Cookson, P. burtonii F. M. Bailey, P. gamopetala Berhaut, P. longiflora var, leucantha 
Benth., #. parviflora Domin, P. pumilio Domin, P. spirostylis var. intercedenrs Domin var. 
intricata Domin, and var. resulans Domin, P. synandra F. Muell, P, triloba Ewart & Cookson 
and Reesia erecta Ewart. The name P. breviffora F. Muell, has been misapplied to the taxon 
described as P. corymbosa var, minor, The record of P. spicata Arn. from Australia is 
considered doubtful. 


Some species of Polycarpaea are of interest to geobotanists (White & 
Francis 1926, Cole 1965) and in recent years there has been a demand for the 
correct identification cf Australian material of the genus. Bakker (1957) 
provided an account of Malesian species, but there has been no treatment of the 
genus in Australia since Bentham (1863). 


The taxonomy and nomenclature of Australian species proved to be somewhat 
confused. These notes fall short of a full revision, mainly because of the brief 
descriptions which lack detail about the ovary, capsule and seeds, 


Key to taxa 


I. Corolla lobes free or united into tube Jess than 0:5 mm tong: staminodes* sometimes 
presenl, sepals less than 5mm long, sometimes without distinct midribs 


Corolla lobes united into a tube more than 0:5 mm long; staminodes absent; sepals up 


to 13mm long with distinct midribs 13 

2. Leaves less than 2 mm iong, as long as the internodes 2 P, microphylla 

Leaves more than 4mm long, usually shorter than internodes _ 3 

3, Staminodes present as linear projections inside petals; sepals 4-5 mm long with deiinite 
midribs 

Staminodes absent; sepals often without definite midribs 6 


4, Stems glabrous; sepals tinged with red, glabrous; capsule ca % as long as corolla 
1 P, ylolacea 
Stems sparsely pubescent; sepals white; capsule at least + as long as corolla 5 


* See Bakker for discussion on morphology of staminodes 


50 


5, Sepals ca 4mm long, hirsute towards base 2 P ostaminodina 
Sepals 4:5~5'5mm long, not hirsute, slightly fimbriate 3 P. fallax 


6. Several stems from a rosette of broad obovate or oblong radical leaves” or simple stem 
with a pair of basal + orbicular leaves 7 


Stems simple, or if much branched then without rosette of broad leaves 9 


7. Single stem with pair of broad basal leaves; corolla 1:3mm long with a_ distinct fold 
inside at base 6 P., diverstfolia 


Much branched with basal rosette; corolla ca 3-5 mm long, corolla without fold 8 


8. Plant pubescent; heads sessile, surrounded by herbaceous floral leaves: sepals without 
midribs 7 P. inyolucrata 


Plant glabrous; heads pedunculale with scarious bracts; sepals with midribs *P, spicata 


GS, Capsule {-seeded; much branched herbs; leaves with fine setaceous points ca 0-5 mm 
long 8 P. holtzei 


Capsule with at least 5 seeds; sparingly branched; leaves usually with shorter points 10 


10. Inflorescence subtended by floral leaves longer than the inflorescence 5 P. arida 
Inflorescence not subtended by floral leaves 4 P. corymbosa, 11 


11. Sepals with + distinct midribs; capsule 1-4-2 mm long; leaves as long as or longer 
than the internodes 4b. P. corymbosa var. torrensis 


Sepals without midribs; capsule to 1-4mm long; leaves shorter than internodes 12 
12. Sepals often reddish at base to c# 2:5 mm long; petals 0-7-1-1 mm Jong 
4b P. corymbosa var. miner 


Sepals white; 2:5-3:5 mm long; petals 0-6-1-4mm long 4a P. corynibosa var. corymbosa 


[3. Stems pubescent; calyx white or suffused with pink, 5-9 mm long; corolla 2-8-7-5 mm 


long 10 P. longiftora 
Stems glabrous; calyx with pink or purplish midrib, not white or suffused with pink 14 
14. Sepals less than 4mm long and corolla less than 2:6mm long 12 P. breviflora 15 


Sepals more than 4-5 mm long and corolla more than 3-4mm long 11 P. spirostylis 16 


[5. Sepals ovate, white (midrib not coloured), inflorescence rather open 
i2a P. brevifiora var. breviftora 


Sepals narrowly ovate, white with distinct purplish midrib, inflorescence rather compact 
12b P, breviflora var. gracilis 


16. Inflorescence open, pedicels more than 0-8 mm long; sepals 6-13 mm long 17 
Inflorescence compact, pedicels less than 0-8 mm long; sepals 4-5-7 mm long 18 


17. Sepals 7-13 mm long with purplish midribs; petals only shortly bifid: staminal filaments 


shorter than the corolla lla P. spirostyiis subsp. sptrostylis 
Sepals 6-7mm long with red-brown midribs; petals deeply bifid (1mm or more); 
staminal filaments longer than the corolla lb P. spirestylis subsp. glebra 

18. Sepals 6-7 mm long with purplish midribs, acute lle P. spirostylis subsp. densiflora 


Sepals 4-5-Simm long with red-brown midribs, not noticeably acute 
lid P. spirostylis subsp. conipacta 


* See p. 61 


31 


J. Polycarpaea violacea (Mart.) Benth.,, Fl. Aust. 1:165 (1863). Based on 
Aylmeria violacea Mart., Nov, Acta Physcio-Med. Nat. Cur. 13:277 


(1826), Type: Crokers I, April EF Cunningham (BRI, K, MEL, 


iso?——see below). 


Achyranthes violacea (Mart.) Spreng., Syst. Cur, Post. 102 (1827). 
Based on Alymeria violacea. 


Alymeria rosea Mart., Nov. Acta Physcio-Med, Nat. Cur. 13:277 (1826). 
Type: Ex herb. Lambert (K, iso). 


Achyranthes rosea (Mart.) Spreng., Syst. Cur. Post. 103 (1827). Based 
on Alymeria rosea. 


Stems glabrous erect with rather short internodes, Leaves glabrous, rather 
broad. Bracts white without prominent midribs, 2-3 mm long; pedicels ca 2mm 
long, pubescent. Sepals 5 mm long tinged with red, with prominent midrib rather 
broad in basal 2mm; petals obtuse or obtusely bifid, up to 2mm long; anthers 
shorter than corolla; staminodes not prominent. Capsule ca 4 as long as corolla. 


Range: Extreme northern part of the Northern Territory. 
Northern Territory: Crokers I., Apr ne Cunningham (BRI, K, MEL); near 


Darwin, Mar 1914, Aen 122 (K): 14 miles [22 km] E of Darwin, Mar 1964, Adams 909 
(CANB, K); Humphy Doo, Mar 1961, McKee 8315 (K); Delissaville, Cox’s Pen., Mar 
1948, Specht 78. 


Two sheets are segregated at K as types. One is Cunningham 267. On the 
other, one fragment labelled Alymeria violacea Mart. which was sent by Martius 
is probably also part of the Cunningham collection. The other fragment on the 
same sheet is merely labelled Aylmeria rosea Mart. “ex herb Lambert”, This may 
be an isotype of A. rosea. 


2, Polycarpaea staminodina F. Muell., Rep. Babbage Exp. 8 (1858). Type: Head 
of Sturt Creek, Feb 1856, Mueller (MEL, holo). 


Sparingly pubescent erect herb, Leaves recurved, pubescent. Bracts at base 
2°5-3:5 mm long, often bilobed at apex; pedicel pubescent, Sepals usually hirsute 
at base, with a definite midrib, ca 4mm long; petals ca 1-2 mm long, shortly 
bilobed; staminodes linear 1-3} as long as petals. Capsule about half as long as 
petals, 


Range: North-western part of the Northern Territory. 


Northern Territory: Victoria River, Apr 1856, Mueller (K); Cullen & Ferguson River, 


in 1927, aie (K); 12 miles [20 km) SW of Katherine, Jun 1949, Perry 1975 (BRI, CANB, 
K, MEL). 


3. Polycarpaea fallax Pedley, sp. nov. affinis P. staminodinae F. Muell. sepalis 
glabris brevioribus et petalis longioribus differt. Typus: Specht 708 
(Holotypus: BRI; isotypus: K, MEL). 


Herb erecta ad 0-5 m alta caulibus sparsim pubescentibus. Folia 1-2 cm longa concaya; 
stipulae subulatae ca 4mm longae. Inflorescentiae terminales + compactae; bracteae ca 5 mm 
longae, anguste ovatae, bifidae laciniataeve apice, fimbriatae basi; pedicelli pubescentes., 
Sepala 4-8—5-5 mm Jonga costis + prominentibus lanceolata ovatave leviter fimbriata prope 
basin; petala 1-8-2mm longa ca 0-4 mm lata leviter erosa vel obtusa apice. Stamina: 
filamenta ca 1-6mm longa; antherae oblongae vel sagittatae 0.4mm longae. Capsula 
globosa ca 1-8 mm longa, 


52 


Erect herb to 50 cm high with sparsely pubescent stems, Leaves 1-2 cm long, 
concave; stipules subulate, ca 4mm long. Inflorescences terminal -- compact; 
bracts ca 5mm long, ovate lanceolate, bifid or laciniate at the apex, fimbriate 
at the base; pedicels pubescent. Sepals 4°8—5-5 mm long with =: prominent 
midribs, lanceolate or ovate slightly fimbriate near the base; petals 1 -8~2 mm long, 
ca 0:4 mm wide, slightly erose or obtuse at the top. Stamens: filaments ca 1-6 mm 
long; anthers oblong or sagittate, 0:4 mm long. Capsule globose, ca 1-8 mm long. 


Range: Northern part of the Northern Territory and the lower part of the Ord 
River basin in Western Australia. 


Western Australia: 27 miles [43 km] NNE of “Denham River”, Jul 1949, Perry 2537 
(BRI, CANB, MEL); near Kununurra, 15° 45'S. 128° 44’E., Sep 1970, Searih-Johnson 559 
7 coh K). Northern. ‘Territory. Port. Darwin, in- 1884; Holter: aie and Jul" 1886," ‘Tenison= — 


P. fallax ee Been confused with a longiflora (Section Pianchonia) but the 
presence of staminodes points to a relationship with P. staminodina in section 
Aylmeria, 


4, Polycarpaeca corymbosa (L.) Lam., Tabe. Encycl. Meth. Bot. 2:129 (1797). 
Based on Achyranthes corymbosa L., Sp. Pl. t:205 (1753). Type: not 
seen. 


Pubescent, sometimes glabrescent; leaves <7: glabrous up to 2-5 cm long. 
Bracts often fimbriate, usually 2—-lobed, 2—4-5 mm long; peduncles hirsute. Sepals 
with or without distinct midribs, white or slightly thickened and reddish at the 
base, 1-8-3-7 mm long; petals =: acute, obtuse or slightly erose, 0:6—-1-4 mm 
long, 3-3 as long as the sepals; anthers usually shorter than the petals. Capsule 
1—2 mm long. 


4a. P. corymbosa var. corymbosa 
Sepals |-9-3-7 mm long; petals 0:6—1-4 mm long; capsules 1-1-6 mm long, 
Leaves not as long as internodes; calyx without reddish tinge towards the base. 


Range: Coastal and subcoastal districts of Australia north of about 22°S lat. in 
both Western Australia and Queensland. 


Western Australia: Between Ashburton and Yule Rivers, Clement (K); between De 
Grey R. and Lagrange B., in 1879, Forrest and Carey (MEL); Derby, Apr 1927, Ewart 
(MEL); near the Ord River, in '1886, O’Donneil (MEL). Northern Territory: Victoria River, 
Feb 1856, Mueller (MEL); 12 miles (20 km] SW of Hooker Creek, Apr 1959, Chippendale 
NT 2230 (MEL); Katherine, Apr 1964, Adams 952 (MEL); Newcastle Waters, in 1887, 
Giles (MEL): Arnhem Land, Apr-June 1928, Basedow 17 (K). Queensland: Burke District: 
Adels Grove, Jun 1950, de Lestang 476 (BRI); Sweers I, Jun 1901, J. F. Bailey (BRI); 
Einasleigh River, Armit 547 (MEL); “Chudleigh Park”, 110 miles [174 km] N of Hughenden, 
Feb 1931, Hubbard & Winders 7609 (BRI, K). Coox Disrricr; 2:5 miles [4km] 8 of 
Somerset, May 1948, Brass 18696 and 19481 (BRI, K): 8 miles [13 km] W of Musgrave T.O., 
13°48’S 143°22’F, Jun 1968, Pedicy 2657 (BRI); near Tolga, Apr 1962, McKee 9406 (BRI, 
K); Lizard 1, Aug 1848, Macgillivray 392 (K). Norra KENNepy District: Cleveland Bay, 
in 1896, Mattingley (MEL): Don River, Edgecombe Bay, in 1886, Birch (MEL), SouTH 
Kennepy Disrricr: Upper Belyando, in 1883, Emunerson (Mey Port Curtis District: 
Rosedale, May 1930, Devey D75 (BRI). 


4b, P. corymbosa var. minor Pediey, var. nov. a P. corymbosa var. corymbosa 
floribus parvis (sepala 1+8—2-2 mm longa; petala 0-7—-1:1 mm longa at 
capsula 0-1~—1-{ mm longa) et sepalis area incrassata triangulare rubra 
saepe basi instructis dignoscenda. Typus: Pedley 1234 (BRI, holo; K, 
MEL, iso). 


33 


Misapplied name: P. breviflora auct. non F. Muell: Benth., Fl. Aust. 
1:166 (1863). : 


Distinguished from P. corymbosa var. corymbosa by the smaller flowers. 
(Sepals 1:8-2-2imm long; petals 0-7-1-lmm and capsule 0-8-1:6 mm long) 
and the sepals often with a reddish triangular thickened area at the base. 


Range: Coastal and semi-arid areas of north-eastern Northern Territory, Queens- 
land and north-eastern New South Wales. One specimen from New Guinea. 


Northern Territory: Bulman, 13° 38'S 134° 25’B, Apr 1963, Cole Bulman 10 (K); 
“Beswick” [14° 30’S 133°R], Apr 1962, Nelson 261 (MEL). Queensland: Burke DIsrrict: 
N of “Riversleigh”, Jun 1963, Gittins 807 (BRI). Cook Districr: Gilbert River, Bick 
(BRI); Palmer River, in 1895, Field (MEI.}; Yorkey’s Knob beach near Cairns, May 1962, 
McKee 9477 (BRI). Norrn KENNgepy District: “Cashmere”, Mar 1875, Armut 154 (MEL); 
Herbert River, Rockingham Bay, Sep 1869, Dallachy (MEL); Edgecumbe Bay, Michael 
1185 (BRI). Mitcuent District: Jericho, Mar 1946, Clemens (BRI, K). Sournh KENNEDY 
District: Cape River, Bowman (MEL); Port Mackay, Diefrich 2480 (MEL). LEICHHARDT 
District: 9 miles [14 km] E of “Mantuan Downs”, Apr 1946, Everist 2541 (BRI); Spring- 
sure, sine coll, (BRE, MEI); Gracemere, Mar 1871, O’Shanesy 1296 (MEL). Wipe Bay 
District: Burnett Heads, Michae/ 1752 (BRI). Moreton District: Islands of Moreton 
Bay, Aug 1855, Mueller (K, MEL). Dartinc Downs District: 12 miles [20 km] W_ of 
Westmar [27° 55'S 149° 35°R], Apr 1963, Pedley 1234 (BRI, K, MEL). New South Wales: 
Warialda, Jul 1905, [Rupp?] (MEL); Crow Mtn, Barraba, Jul 1913, Rupp (MEL); 
Narrabri, Jan 1883, Betche (MEL). Papua: CENTRAL District: Bootiess Bay near Port 
Moresby, Jun 1960. Womersiey & Thorne NGF 12858. 


4c. P. corymbosa var. torrensis Pedley, var. nov. a P. corymbosa var. corymbosa 
foliis internodia sequantibus vel eis longioribus et sepalis costis = 
manifestis instructis dignoscenda. Sepals 2-5-3mm_ longa; petala 
0-7~1-1 mm longa. Capsula 1-4-2 mm longa pilis paucis longis basi 
vestitis. Typus: Badu L, Bick 83. (BRI, holo). 


Distinguished from P. corymbosa yar. corymbosa by the leaves as long as 
or longer than the internodes and sepals with <¢ distinct midnerves. Sepals 
2°5—3 mm long; petals 0-7-1 mm long. Capsule 1-42 mm long with a few 
long hairs at the base. 


Range: The northern part of Cape York Peninsula and islands of Torres Strait, 


Cook Disrricr: Albany L, Aug 1855, Mfveller (K, MEL); Badu L, May 1911, Bick 
83 (BRI): Thursday IL, in 1878, Chalmers (MEL); Cape York, Daemei (K, MEL); 
Somerset, June 1897, Bailey (BRI), 


Polycarpaea corymbosa, a pantropical species exhibiting a considerable range 
of variation, should properly be examined throughout its range if a satisfactory 
classification is to be arrived at. The following observations may assist other 
workers on the species. : 


On the whole, specimens from Australia resemble South American ones 
more closely than they do ones from Africa, Brenan and Taylor (Kew herb. 
records) noted that P. brasiliensis Comb. appeared to be different, but not 
specifically so from P. corymbosa from Asia and Africa, and that Chodat and 
Hassler had made the combination P. corymbosa var, brasiliensis for Paraguayan 
specimens, They considered the plant described as P. nebulosa by Lakela 
(1963) to be a slight variant of P. brasiliensis. 


In view of the wide distribution and the complexity of the variation of the 
species I am reluctant to complicate the taxonomy of the species by describing 
two more infra-specific taxa, but within Australia both are sufficiently distinct 
to warrant at least varietal rank. 


54 


P. corymbosa var. torrensis is well defined in both foliar and capsular 
characters, The well defined rib of its sepals distinguishes it from the other 
varieties, Both Bentham (1863) and Bakker (1957) regarded the absence of 
a rib on the sepals as distinctive character of P. corymbosa, but accounts of 
the species vary from country to country and there are often inconsistencies 
between descriptions and illustrations. For example, Rohrbach (1872) stated 
that the midrib of P. corymbosa was hardly prominent (“vix prominente”) but 
it is weli enough defined in the plate: The plant drawn is remarkably similar 
in general appearance to P. corymbosa var, torrensis. 

P. corymbosa var. minor is not as well defined as var. forrensis. I have 
applied the name to a variant found on sand in inland and coastal localities 
that varies more in general appearance than in any single character. [t has 
somewhat smaller flowers and its sepals are tinged with red at the base. The 
taxon has been generally wrongly referred to as either P. breviflora or P. 
corymbosa var. breviflora. The misidentification is discussed under P. breviflora 
(p. 60), 


5. Polycarpaea arida Pedley, sp. nov. affinis P. corymbosae (L.) Lam, inflores- 
centiis foliis floralibus longis ++ subtentis differt. Typus: Zyerist 3964 
(BRI, holo; K, MEL, iso), 

Herba perennis ad 10cm alta; caules pubescentes pilis albis crispis vestiti: stipulae 
anguste ovatae integrae vel profunde laciniatae, foliis breviorae. Folia linearia 5-10 mm 
longa, mucronulata glabra, ea inflorescentiam condensam corymbosam subtentia inflores- 
centiam aequantia vel eam longiora, Bracteae sine castis sepala +: aequantes; pedicelli 
pubescentes, Sepala 2-5-3:5mm longa sine costis sed basibus crassis cartilagineis ca 
0-3—-0-5mm longis; petala 0-6-1-1mm longa obtusa integra; stamina petalis brevioria 
filamentis 0:-3mm longis et antheris globulis 0-2mm diam. Capsula 2mm _ longa. 

Perennial to 10cm tall; stems pubescent with white crisped hairs; stipules 
narrowly ovate, entire or deeply lanciniate, shorter than the leaves. Leaves linear 
5—10 mm long, mucronulate glabrous, those subtending the condensed corymbose 
inflorescence as long as or longer than the inflorescence. Bracts without midribs, 
about as long as the sepals; pedicels pubescent. Sepals 2:5-3-5 mm long without 
midribs but with thick cartilaginous bases ca 0-3-0-5 mm long; petals 0-6—-1-1 
mm long, obtuse, entire; stamens shorter than the petals with filaments 0-3 mm 
long and globular anthers 0:3 mm in diameter. Capsule 2 mm long. 


Range: Arid parts of northern Australia. 


Western Australia: “Mt House”, Apr 1955, Lazarides 5160 (BRI); Mt Squires, Barrow 
Ra, Aug 1891, Helis (MEL). Northern Territory: Glen of Palms, in 1872, Giles (MEL); 
James Range, in 1886, Schwartz (MEL); Finke River, in 1879, Kempe (MEL}; Coglin 
River, near Charlotte Waters, May 1926, Basedow 9 (K). South Australia: Vicinity of 
Lake Eyre, Andrews comm. Schomburgk CK), Queensland: Grecory Nortu DrsTricr: 
ca 100 miles [160 km] W of Windorah, Jun 1949, Everist 3964 (BRI, K, MEL); Thylungra, 
May 1963, Macdonald 432 (K). Warreco District: “Offham”’, 40 miles [64km] W of 
Cunnamulla, Apr 1947, Geary (BRI). New South Wales: Mt Poole, near Wilcannia, in 
1887, Bauerien (MEL); Wankeroo Hills, 20 miles [32 km] N of Broken Hill, Jun 1928, 
Morris 2048 (BRI, K). 


6. Polycarpaea diversifolia Domin, Biblioth. Bot. 89:102 (1925). t. 20 f. 8-15 
Type: between Ashburton and Yule River, Clement (PR, holo; K, iso). 


Annual with a pair of persistent orbicular basal leaves, ca 12 mm and 9 mm 
wide. Stems pubescent with crisped hairs. Upper leaves linear ca 2 mm long and 
1mm wide, Inflorescence rather loose; bracts ca 3:5 mm long. Sepals without 
midribs, 2-5-3 mm long; corolla 1-2-1:3mm long with obscure folds inside 
at the base; staminal filaments 0:4 mm long. Capsule depressed globular, 0-4 mm 
long, O0'6mm in diameter. 


55 


Range: North-western Australia. 


Western Ausiralia: between Ashburton and Yule Rivers, Clement (K, PR). Northern 
Territory: C.5.LR.0, Research Station, Katherine, Apr 1964, Adams 952 (K}. 


J have seen only two collections of P. diversifolia, It appears to differ from 
P, corymbosa in being an annual and in having obscure folds inside the petals 
at the base, but the two may prove to be conspecific. 7 


7. Polycarpaea involucrata F. Muell., Rep. Babb. Exped. 9 (1858). Type: Sturts 
Creek and Upper Victoria River, Mar 1856, Mueller (MEL, holo; 
K, iso?)}. 

Similar to a species of Alternanthera in general appearance. Much branched; 
stems pubescent. Lower leaves rosulate, spathulate; upper — sessile, 5-9 mm long 
and 2mm wide with crisped hairs on midribs below; stipules ca 3-4 mm long. 
Flowers <+ sessile in heads subtended by leaves ca 7 mm long; sepais 3-5~4-5 
mm long, the outer ones thickened at the base; corolla 1-2 mm long, rather stout; 
staminal filaments 0:6mm long. Capsule top-shaped with stout capitate stigma. 


Range: Known only from type and one other locality in the Northern Territory. 


Northern Territory: O.T, Station, 16°37°S 153°03°E, May 1947, Blake 17663 (BRI); 
Victoria River, May 1968, Byrnes NB 710 (BRI). 


8. Polycarpaea holtzei Maiden & Betche in Ewart & Davies, Fl. North. Terr. 
109 (1917). Type: Pine Creek, Feb 1914, Allen (K, iso). 


P, pumilio Domin, Biblioth. Bot. 89:102 (1925). Type: between Ash- 
burton and Yule River, Clement (PR, holo; K, iso). 


Much branched; stems with hairs ca 0-4mm long, Leaves appearing verti- 
cellate, linear, glabrous, with a fine point ca 1mm long; stipules white laciniate 
almost as long as the leaves. Flowers in terminal coymbs; bracts ca 3 mm long, 
fimbriate; pedicels ca 0-8 mm long, sparsely hairy; sepals glabrous, without ribs 
1-7—2-8 mm long, fimbriate or deeply and rather irregularly bifid; petals brown, 
obtuse, 0:4—0-6 mm Jong; anthers Jonger than the filaments. Capsule 0:8 mm 
long obovoid, 3—valved, 1—seeded. 


Range: Along north-western coast of Western Australia through the Kimberley 
region to the north-western part of the Northern Territory. 


Western Australia: Harding River, in 1895, Cusack 101 (MEL); between Gasgoyne & 
Fortescue Rivers, in 1885, King (MEL); Nickol Bay, in 1876, Crouch (MEL); near “Mt 
House”, Apr 1955, Lazarides 5160 (Kk, MEL). Northern Territory: Port Darwin, in 1890, 
Holtze 1011 (MEL): Darwin, Nov 1929, Bleeser 179 (MEL); [18 km] $ of Batchelor, 
Mar 1961, Chippendale NT 7729 (K); Edith River, Jan 1965, Wilson 246 (i). 

The flowers of the type of P. heltzei are smaller than those of the type of 
P. pumilio, but there is little doubt that the two are conspecific. P. holtzei is 
unusual in Polycarpaea in having a 1-seeded capsule. It could well constitute a 
distinct section. 


9. Polycarpaea microphylla Pediey, sp. nov.; a speciebus Australiae bene distincta, 
antem facie et habitu P. hassleranae Chod, ex America australi similis, 


Typus: Brass 415 (BRI, holo). 
Herba ramosissima perennis usque ad 15cm alta caulibus hirsutis foliis in verticillaum 


3-foliatum dispositis. Folia acicularia 1:5-2mm longa internodia aequantia; stipulae folia 
aequantes. Flores singulatim vel in fasciculis paucifloris in extremitatibus ramulorum dispositi; 


56 


bracteae ovatae inteprae acuminatae vel profunde bifidae fimbriates vel margine minute 
serrato, 1-2 mm longae; sepals lanceolata vel ovata acuminata 2:5 mm longa interdum 
subtiliter pubescentia, petala lanceolata obtusa 1-5-2 mm longa; filamenta staminea 0-5-1 mm 
long, antherae elongatae sagittatae ca 0-5 mm longae; ovarium glabrum sessile 3-valvatum 
ca Imm longum, stylus tenuis 0-6-1 mm longus. — 


Branched perennial herb to 15 cm high with hirsute stems, Leaves acicular 
1-5-2 mm long in whorls of three, as long as the internodes; stipules as long as 
the leaves. Flowers single or in few-flowered fascicles at the end of the branches; 
bracts ovate entire acuminate or deeply bifid, fimbriate or minutely serrate on 
the margins, 1-2 mm long; sepals lanceolate or ovate acuminate 2-5 mm long 
sometimes finely pubescent; petals narrow lanceolate, obtuse, 1-5—2mm_ long; 
staminal filaments 0-5-1 mm long, anthers elongate, sagittate ca 0-5 mm long; 
ovary glabrous, sessile, 3—valved, ca 1 mm long, style slender 0-6-1 mm long. 


Range: Sporadically distributed from Katherine in the Northern Territory to the 
extreme north-west of Queensland. 


Northern Territory: Katherine Gorge, May 1968, Byrnes NB 679 (DNA); Robinson 
River, Jul 1925, Brass 415 (BRI). Queensland: Burke District: N of “Riversleigh”, Jun 
1963, Gittins 807 (BRI). 


Polycarpaea microphylla is remarkably similar in general appearance to 
P, hasslerana Chod. which is confined to south-western Brazil (Matto Grosso) 
and Paraguay. It has larger flowers and shorter leayes however. It is possible 
that both species have evolved from P. corymbosa. 


10, Polycarpaea longiflora F. Muell., Rep. Babbage Exped. 8 (1858). Syntypes: 
two specimens—Victoria River, May 1856, Mueller (MEL; K, iso?). 


P. longiflora var. leucantha Benth. Fl. Aust. 1:165 (1863). Type: 
Victoria River, Mueller CK, holo; MEL, iso). 


Reesia erecta Ewart, Proc. Roy. Soc. Victoria 26 (n.s.): 9 (1913); Willis, 
Vict. Nat. 61:175 (1945). Type: near Pine Creek, Aug 1904, Niemann 
(MEL, holo). 


Erect perennial rather woody at the base, stems pubescent. Leaves sub- 
glabrous to pubescent, shorter than the internodes, Bracts acuminate 6-7 mm 
long, fimbriate in the lower part. Pedicels 2-5 mm long, pubescent. Sepals oblong 
acute fimbriate in the lower part, with a definite midrib, (S—)6—8(—9) mm long 
ca 2mm wide; petals united at base into a tube, 


Range: The north-western part of Western Australia and the northern part of 
the Northern Territory. 


Western Australia: Barrow I., Nov 1953, Hill 430 (&); between Ashburton & Yule 
R., Clentent (K); Nickol Bay, in 1874, Crouch (MEL); Dampier Arch., in 1875, Walcott 
(MEL); Yule River, in 1878, Forrest (MEL); Roebuck Bay, in 1889, Tepper (MEL); 
Greville I., Aug 149/1821, Cunninghany CK); Cambridge Gulf, in 1886, Ranford & Nyniasy 
(MEL). Northern Territory: 40 miles [64 km] W of Wavehill Police Station, Jun 1949, Perry 
2272 (BRI, MEL). Port Darwin, in 1879, Forrest (MEL); $7 miles [91 km] SE of Adelaide 
River, Mar 1963, Lazarides 6842 (K); 9 miles [14 km] S of Batchelor, Mar 1961, Chippendale 
NT 7745 (K); 66 miles [105 km] NE of “Creswell”, Jul 1948, Perry 1664 (BRI, K); 
Settlement Creek, Apr 1922, Brass 147 (BRI). Queensland: Burke Districr: near mouth 
of Settlement Creek, Jun 1948, Perry 1242 (BRI, K). 


57 


There is an intergrade from plants with white sepals through those tinged 
with pink to plants with violet sepals. The width of leaves of no taxonomic 
significance so that recognition of P. lfongiflora var. leucantha is not justified. 
Willis has discussed the identity of Reesia erecta. 


1L. P. spirostylis F. Muell., Rep. Babb. Exped. 8 (1858). 


Erect herb up to 4Qcm high branched at the base, glabrous except for 
a few hairs sometimes in the axils of the leaves and bracts. Leaves linear 
mucronulate 1-3 cm long. Inflorescence terminal, corymbose, open or compact; 
bracts narrowly ovate to ovate, sometimes amplexicaule, sometimes ciliolate or 
laciniate towards the top; pedicels up to 2mm long. Sepals with brownish, 
reddish or purplish midribs 4-5—13 mm long, narrowly ovate; corolla 3:4-10 mm 
long, occasionally as long as the sepals, the tube 2-5- 6mm long the lobes 
sometimes deeply bifid; staminal filaments shorter than to longer than the 
corolla. 


11a. P. spirostylis subsp. spirostylis, 
Type: Tropical Australia, Mueller (MEL, holo; K, iso) 


P, burtonii F, M. Bailey, Proc. Roy. Soc. Qd 1:85 (1884). Syntypes: 
Walsh Range, between Tate River & Thornborough, Burton 3 (BRI; 
MEL, iso); Herberton, Stuart (BRI) 


P. spirostylis var. burtonii (F, M. Bailey) Domin, Biblioth, Bot, 89:99 
(1925). Based on P. burtonii. 


P. spirostylis var. rostilans Domin, op. cif. 100 (1925). Type: Locis 
subrudis in xerodrymio apud opp. Chillagoe, Feb 1910, Demin (PR, 
holo}. 


P, spirostylis var. intercedens Domin, op. cit. 100 (1925). Type: Apud 
fil. Walsh R., prope opp. Chillagoe, Feb 1910, Domin (PR) 


Inflorescence open with pedicels 0-8-2 mm long. Sepals with purplish 
midribs, 7-13 mm long; petals shortly bifid 7-10mm long united into a tube 
4-6 mm long; staminal filaments shorter than the corolla. 


Range: South-eastern Cape York Peninsula, headwaters of Gilet Flinders and 
Burdekin Rivers south to about 20°S, 


BuRKE District: “Mt Sturgeon”, N of Hughenen, Feb 1931, Hubbard & Winders 7572 
(BRI, K). Coox Disrricr: Gilbert River, Mar 1925, Brass 448 (BRI); Einasleigh River, 
Armit 1072 (MEL); Mt Molley, Apr 1932, Brass 2450 (BRI); Hodgkinson River, in 1882, 
Gulliver (MEL); ca 20 miles [32 km] SE of Chillagoe, Jun 1970, Leroy (BRI): Granite 
Creek, ca 8 miles [13 km] W of Mareeba, Apr 1967, Pedley 2247 CBRI); Stannary Hills, 
Jan 1962, Gittins 537 (BRI}, Norra KENNEDY Disrricr: Millstream Falls, Ravenshoe, 
Jun 1913, Bick (BRI); Rockingham Bay, Jun 1866, Dallachy (MEL); 100 miles swamp, 
Herbert River, Mar 1875, Arnit 123 (MEL). Sours KENNEDY District: Collinsville, 
147°S5V’E, 20°34’S, Oct 1969, Zinunerman (BRI). 


P. spirostylis subsp. spirostylis sometimes grows on soils containing high 
concentrations of copper and zinc and has been used as an indicator of copper 
deposits. It often grows on country without any sign of mineralization. 


P. spirostylis var. rosulans and P. spirostylis yar. intercedens were based 
on rather young plants of P. spirostylis subsp, spirostylis, 


58 


11b, P. spirostylis subsp. glabra (White & Francis) Pedley, stat. nov. Based on 
_ P. glabra White & Francis, Proc. Roy. Soc. Qd 37:152 (1926). Type: 
Mt Isa, Dugald Silver Lode, Apr 1924, Miller (BRI, holo). 


P, synandra F. Muell., Rep. Babb. Exped. 8 (1858). Type: not seen— 
see below. 


P. spirostylis yar. intricata Domin, Bibl. Bot. 89:100 (1923). Type: 
Burketown, Ball (PR, holo). 


Inflorescence open with pedicels more than 0-8mm long. Sepals with 
red-brown midribs 6-7 mm long; corolla (4—)5~—6 mm long united into a tube 
2:5-3-2 mm long, the lobes bifid (1 mm or more); staminal filaments longer than 
the corolla. | 


Range: The extreme north-western part of Western Australia, the Northern 
Territory, western Queensland and northern South Australia. 


Western Australia: 17°17’S 123°05’B, in 1879, Carey (MEL); near the Ord River, in 
1886, O’Donneli (MEL). Northern Territory: Victoria River, Mueller (MEL); Plum Tree 
Creek, S. Alligator River, Feb 1969, Byrnes 1371 (BRI, DNA); Settlement Creek, Apr 1922, 
Brass 148 (BRI); near Central Mt, Stuart, Jun 1924, Ewart (MEL); Ingallana Creek, 21 
miles [34km] NW of “Anningie” (ca 21°35’S 133°E), Jul 1958, Chippendale NT 4713 
(BRI, MEL). Queensland: Burke District: Lawn Hill, May 1940, Jensen 68 (BRI); Mt 
Isa, Feb 1931, Winders in Hubbard 7397 (BRI, K); 20 miles [32km] W of Cloncurry, 20° 
42'S 140°12’F, Apr 1971, Beaumont 7055 (BRI). Mircuert Disrricr: near the Alice 
River, Birch (MEL). Grecory Souty Disrricr: Near Eyre Creek, in 1877, Kayser 
MED, South Australia: Wonamulla [Woolnomulla Bluff, 136°14’S 30°10’E], Mueller 
(MEL), 


P. spirostylis subsp. glabra has smaller flowers than P. spirostylis subsp. 
spirostylis with deeply bifid lobes and staminal filaments longer than the corolla. 
There are intermediates where the ranges of the two meet and subspecific rank 
is appropriate. Bakker (1957) observed under P. spirostylis that Hubbard 7397 
“differs in having bifid petals and filaments slightly longer than the petals”. 


White and Francis noted in the protologue to P. glabra that it grew on 
silver-lead lodes. Cole (1965) has demonstrated the plant’s ability to grow in 
such situations is due to its low uptake of minerals on heavily mineralized soils. 


I have taken P. glabra as the basionym because the plant has been generally 
referred to in geobotanical literature as P. glabra and because there are some 
difficulties in the typification of the earlier P. synandra. The type of P. synandra 
has not been located. The type locality was given by Mueller as Wirrawirraloo, 
which is the name of a creek near Woomera, South Australia. No specimen 
with this locality was found at either Kew or Melbourne. At MEL there is a 
sheet (MEL 49121) on which are mounted two whole plants and three fragments. 
All represent one species. The sheet bears a label C(initialled by Bentham) 
written by Mueller—-‘‘Polycarpaea synandra ferd. Mueller/Victoria River. ferd 
Mueller”, The fragments are in two packets attached to the sheet. On one 
is written “Polycarpaea synandra Victoria River”; on the other “Polycarpaea 
synandra Wonamulla”. The last locality is, from the coordinates given in the 
introduction to the Report of Babbage’s Expedition, the same as or close to 
Woolnomulla Bluff which is about 150 km north-west of the type locality given 
by Mueller, 


In the absence of a specimen from the type locality the fragments in the 
packet marked Wonamulla are taken as representative of P. synandra. They 
were collected by Mueller close to the type locality and were seen by Bentham. 


39 


lic. P. spirostylis subsp. densiflora (Benth.) Pedley, comb. et. stat. nov. Based 
on P. synandra var. (?)}densiflora, Benth., Fl. Aust. 1:165 (1863). 


Lectotype: Cape Flinders, Jul as ‘ 


P, gamopetala Berhaut, Bull. Mus. Nat. Hist. Natur. 25 (ser. 2): 212 
(1953). Type: Senegal. Ex herb. DC., Herb. Moquin—Tandon (P, holo). 


Inflorescence compact with pedicels less than 0:8mm long. Sepals with 
purplish midribs, 6-7 mm long; corolla 4-5-5:5 mm long united into a tube 
3-4 mm long, the lobes entire or slightly bilobed; staminal filaments about as 
long as the corolla, 


Range: Amhem Land (?) and Cape York Peninsula. 


Northern Territory, 4 miles [(6km] NE of “Mountain Valley”, Apr 1962, Nelson 188 
(BRI, DNA, MEL). Queensland: Coox Disrricr: Mapoon, May 1911, Bick 109 (BRI); 
Musgrave Tele. Office, Mar 1893, Jacobsen (BRI); Kennedy road, 44 miles [70 km] beyond 
(N of) Laura, Jul 1965, Gittins 975 (BRI, MEL} 


Cunningham (K) 


P. spirostylis subsp. densiflora and P. spirostylis subsp. spirostylis differ in 
the slightly smaller flowers and more compact inflorescences of the latter. The 
ranges of the two are distinct. I have some doubt about the identity of some 
specimens from the Northern Territory, but they belong here rather than with 
other subspecies. 


There are two syntypes of P. synandra var. densifiora at Kew and possibly 
another at Melbourne. One at Kew has been chosen as lectotype: the others 
from Port Denison and Rockhampton are referred to P. spirestylis subsp. 
compacta. 


Behaut expressed doubt that P. gamopetala was native to Africa. He recog- 
nised that it belonged to section Planchonia but was unable to place it and 
therefore described it as new. Berhaut’s doubts were justified. The specimen 
at Paris should be referred to P. spirostylis var, densiflora. 


11d. P. spirostylis subsp. compacta Pedley, subsp. nov. Inflorescentia compacta 
pedicellis minus quam 0-8mm longis instructa. Sepals 4-5-5 mm 
longa costis porphyreis ornata; corolla 3-5-4mm longa lobis non 
profunde incisuratis instructa, in tubum conjunctis; filamenta staminea 
corolla breviora, Typus: Speck 4720 (BRI, holo; K, MEL, iso). 


Inflorescence compact with pedicels less than 0-8 mm long. Sepals 4-5—5 mm 
long usually with reddish-brown midribs; corolla 3-5—4 mm long with lobes not 
deeply notched united in a tube ca 2:5 mm long; staminal filaments shorter than 
the corolla. 


Range: South-eastern Gulf of Carpentaria to central Queensland. 


Burke District: 16 miles [26 km] W of Croydon, Tul 1960, Trapneli 206 (BRI), Coox 
District: Cumberland, Gilbert River [18°15’S 143°30’F], May 1937, Brass 8830 (BRI). 
NORTH KENNEDY District: Port Denison, Fitzalan CK, MEL, syntype of P. synandra var. 
densiflora). MrrcHett Disrricr: near the Alice River, in 1884, Birch (MEL). Soutu 
KENNEDY DISTRICT: “Cerito” [21°13’S 147°45’E], May 1964, Adams 970 (BRI, CANB). 
Porr Curtis Disrricr: Rockhampton, [? Thezet] (MEL), Leicunarpr Disrreicr: Lake 
Elphinstone, Dietrich (MEL) 


P. spirostylis subsp. compacta resembles P. spirostylis subsp. densiflora (and 
P. breviflora var, gracilis) in having compact heads but differs from the other 
subspecies in having smaller flowers. 


60 


12. P. breviflora F. Muell., Rep. Babb. Exped. 9 (1858), 


Perennial herb glabrous except for a few long hairs in axils of leaves and 
bracts. Bracts acute or acuminate sometimes laciniate in lower half, 2-3 mm 
long. Sepals white with prominent midrib, (2-5-)3-4mm long, white with 
white or purplish midribs; corolla (1:2-)1:5-2:6mm long with a_ tube 
0-5--1:0mm long and bifed lobes. Stamens almost as long as the corolla. 


i2a. P. breviflora var. brevifiora, 
Type: Gulf of Carpentaria, Mueller (MEL, holo; K, iso). 


P, corymbosa var. breviflora CF. Muell.) Domin, Biblioth. Bot, 89:10 
(1925), based on P, breviftora. 


P. brevianthera Ewart & Davies, Fl. North. Terr. 109 (1917). Type: 
Roper River, in 1911, Baldwin Spencer (MEL, holo). 


P, triloba Ewart & Cookson in Ewart & Davies, op. cit. 109 (1917). 
Type: Georgina River, 1888, Henry (MEL, holo). 


P, parviflora, Domin, Biblioth. Bot. 89: 100 (1925). Type: Locis subnudis 
in xerodrymio apud opp. Cloncurry, Feb 1910, Domin (PR, holo). 


Inflorescence spreading; sepals white, ovate. 


Range: North-eastern part of Arnhem Land, north-western to central inland 
Queensland. 


Norihern Territory: Katherine Gorge, Mar 1971, Dunlop & Byrnes 2162 (DNA); 7 miles 
[11 km] NW of “Alexandria”, Mar 1956, Chippendale NT 1945 (BRI, MEL): Manners 
Creek”, May 1955, Chippendale NT 1141 (BRI, MEL); 25 miles [40 km] NE of “Tarlton 
Downs”, May 1955, Lazarides 5239 (BRI, MEL). Queensland: Burke Disrricr: 14 miles 
[22km] N of Turn-off Lagoon, Jun 1966, Ped/ey 2076 (BRI); Doomadgee Mission, 
Whitehouse (BRE); Mt Isa, Feb 1931, Winders in Hubbard 7417 (BRI, K); Cloncurry, in 
1883, Palmer 77 (MEL). GREGory Nortru District: “Oban”, ca 62 miles [100 km] SE of 
Mt Isa, Dec 1947, Everist 3349 (BRY); Diamantina Lakes, Oct 1941, Walker (BRI). 
MITCHELL Disrrict: Prairie, Feb 1931, Hubbard 7074 (BRI, K); near Blackall, Feb 1938, 
Everist 1588 (BRI). 


12b. P. breviflora var. gracilis (Benth.) Pedley, comb, nov. Based on P. 
synandra var. gracilis Benth., Fl. Aust. 1:165 (1863) Lectotype: Port 


Essington, Apr oe , Cunningham (K; MEL, iso). 
Inflorescence rather compact; sepals narrowly ovate, white with distinct 
purplish midrib. 


Range: Coastal parts of Arnhem Land. 


Northern Territory: Arnhem’s Land, &rown (MEL); Croker L, Mar 1883, Foelsche 69 
(MEL); Melville Bay, 12°11S 136°35°R, Aug 1948, Speehy 917 (BRI, MEL): Port 
Bradshaw, 12°27’S 136°42’B, Jul 1948, Specht 729 (BRI, MEL); South Bay, Bickerton I, 
13°45'S 136° O6’E, Jun 1948, Specht 581 (BRI, MEL). 


In general appearance P. breviflora var. gracilis resembles P. spirostylis 
subsp. densiflora but its flowers are distinctly smaller. Its narrower sepals with 
prominent purplish midribs and more compact inflorescences distinguish it from 
P. breviflora var. brevifiora. 


61 


P. breviflora is distinguished from other species of section Planchonia in 
having small flowers, It rescinbles P. corymbosa and its allies (section 
Polycarpaea) but the corolla is united into a short but definite tube. Flowers of 
P. breviflora sometimes have only rudimentary anthers and are functionally 
female. The flowers may also be heterostylous. As can be seen from the figures 
with the original descriptions, one of the differences between P. brevianthera and 
P, triloba is the somewhat smaller anthers of P. triloba, This difference is of no 
taxonomic significance. 


The type specimen of P, breviflora is extremely poor and it is not surprising 
that the name has been misapplied. In the protologue Mueller noted that “A 
plant closely allied to this species and possibly only a variety of it occurs on 
Moreton [sland”. Bentham (1863) referred Mueller’s specimen (“Islands of 
Moreton Bay”) to P. breviflora without comment, and, because of the scrappiness 
of the type material, since then the name P. breviflora has been incorrectly applied 
to the taxon represented by this specimen. Domin in making the combination 
P, corymbosa var. breviflora recognised the position of Mueller’s Moreton Bay 
specimen, but his combination must apply to P. breviflora sens. strict. not to the 
Moreton Bay plant which is referred to P. corymbosa var. minor. 


Because the name P, breviflora has been misapplied for a long time, 
certainly for the last fifty years, some authors (for example, Burtt 1973) would 
reject it under Article 69 of the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature as 
being a long persistent source of error. If this were done either the name 
P, brevianthera or P. triloba would have to be applied to the species. The 
taxonomy and nomenclature of almost all Australian species of Polycarpaea 
have been in confused state for so long however, that the misapplication of one 
name is of little significance among a large number of misidentifications. I have 
therefore retained the name P. breviflora for the species to which it was applied 
by Mueller. 


Excluded species 
P, spicata Arn. 


There is one specimen at Kew labelled “N.W. Coast, Bynoe”. I have 
seen no other material from Australia and until further specimens are collected 
I regard the record as a doubtful one. The species occurs in N.E. Africa and 
India but is absent from Malesia. 


References 


BaKKER, K. (1957), Revision of the genus Polycarpaea in Malaysia. Act. Ber, Neerland, 
6:48-53., 


BENTHAM, G. (1863). Polycarpaea in Flora Australiensis 1:163-167. 


Burt, B, L. (1973). Polygala arvensis, chinensis and glomerata. Nofes Rey. Bot, Gard. 
Edinburgh 32:403-404, 


CoLe, Monica M. (1965). The use of vegetation in mineral exploration in Australia. 
Eighth Commonwealth Min. Metall, Cong. Proc. 6. Paper 13:1429-1458. 


LAKELA, OLGA (1963). Annotation of North American Polycarpaea, Rhodora 65:35-44. 
Roursacw, P. (1872). Polycarpaea in Flora Brasiliensis 14(2):254-25S. 


Wuire, C. T. & W. D, Francis (1926), Contribution to the Queensland Fiora, No. 3. 
Proc. Roy. Sac, Od 37:152-166, 


Austrobaileya 1 (1): 63-74 (1977) 


NOTES ON QUEENSLAND ORCHIDACEAE, I. 


By P. S. Lavarack, 
National Parks and Wildlife Service of Queensland, Brisbane. 


Summary 


Two new species of Orchidaceae from Cape York Peninsula are described, These are: 
Dendrobium tozerensis P. Lavarack sp, noy. and Oberonia carnosa P. Lavarack sp. nov. The 
following five orchids previously unrecorded in Australia are here recorded for the first time: 
Bulbophyllum masdevailiaceum Kranzlin, B. leratii (Schlechter) J. J. Smith, Taeniophyllum 
malianum Schlechter, Eulophia pulchra (Thouars) Lindl, and Schaoenorchis sarcophyla 
Schlechter, while Didymtoplexus pallens Griff, ig recorded in north Queensland for the first 
time, 


In the course of field work carried out on Cape York Peninsula during 
1973-76 several interesting species of Orchidaceae were discovered. One is 
previously unrecorded in Queensland and five previously unrecorded in Australia, 
while two are here described as new species. 


Didymoplexus pallens Griff., Calc. J. Nat. Hist. 4:383, t. 17 (1884); J. J. Sm., 
Orchid Java Fig. Atlas 1 f. 51 (1908); Dockr., Aust. Indig. Orchids 
1:218 (1969). 


Cook District: Tully-Mission Beach Road, about 15km from Tully, Jan 1975, 
Lavarack N, P. 2600. 


This small saprophytic orchid has not previously been recorded from 
Queensland, although it has been collected in the Northern Territory and other 
locations from Indonesia to India. For some time a species of Didymoplexus 
has been known to occur in the coastal lowlands of the Cardwell area in 
Northern Queensland, but its identity remained unknown. This species showed 
little agreement with the figure in J. J. Smith’s Figure Atlas of “Die Orchideen 
von Java” (copied by Dockrill in his “Australian Indigenous Orchids”). Recently 
some fluid-preserved material of the North Queensland species was sent to 
Mr. D. Blaxell (then Australian Botanical Liaison Officer at Kew) and he 
reported that the figures quoted above are misleading and that these specimens 
are a good match with the type drawing. 


D. pallens is a small, delicate saprophyte which apparently flowers after 
the first soaking summer rains in December or January. It is a plant of the 
coastal Melaleuca-dominated forests and commonly occurs on small tussocks 
in areas which are otherwise swampy after heavy rain. It has been collected 
twice by the author in the area between Ingham and Tully in North Queensland, 
but possibly is a quite widespread plant in the humid tropics as it is very easily 
overlooked. 

Each plant produces several flowers only one of which is open at any given 
time. The flowers are glistening white with a yellow-orange group of calli on 
the mid-line of the labeilum. (See Figure 2a.) 


64 


Bulbophyilum masdevalliaceum Kranzlin, Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 34:251 (1904). 


Coox Districr: Cape York Peninsula, 4 km west of Hunter Point, 11°30'S; 142°47’E, 
Aug 1973, Lavarack N.P. 2509 (BRI 193838). 


A locally abundant epiphyte in simple notophyll vine forest where it 
commonly occurs on trees with a fibrous or papery bark—notably Acmena 
hemilampra (F. Muell. ex F. M. Bailey) Merr. & Perry. 


Plant consisting of a creeping rhizome with pseudobulbs about 2-3 cm 
apart. Pseudobulbs 2-4cem long and 0:5—i cm in diameter, tapered towards 
the apex and strongly grooved, Leaves lanceolate 6-12 x 2cm with a petiole 
about 2~3cm long. Inflorescence erect 10-16cm, single flowered. Lateral 
sepals connate at the base, 5cm long and 1cm at the widest, produced into 
filiform “tails” 3cm long; red-purple with a cream-yellow margin. Dorsal 
sepal 3 x Scm shortly caudate, the margins densely ciliate. Petals 5 mm, 
faleate, apiculate. Labellum delicately hinged with a smaller basal portion about 
2-3 % 2mm consisting of 2 short lateral lobes, purple in colour with a yellow 
throat; midlobe filiform 5-6mm, yellow with a purple tip. Column erect 
2-3mm long and about 2mm in diameter with 2 slender pointed stelidia 
projecting above the anther. 


This species belongs to the section Sestochilus. It is easily separated from 
the other Australian member of this section (8. baileyi) by the elongate lateral 
sepals and very small petals. It has been recorded from New Guinea, but not 
previously from Australia as the area in which it occurs has only recently 
become accessible. 


B. masdevalliaceum Kranzlin is very similar to B. blumei CLindl.) J. J. 
Smith var. longicaudatum J. J. Smith and Smith is of the opinion that “B. 
masdevalliaceum Kranzlin appears to me to be a large flowered form of the 
very variable B, blume?” (Smith 1911). However Schlechter disagrees with this 
stating “This plant (1.e. B. masdevalliaceum) is definitely distinct and not, as 
J. J, Smith suggests, a large variety of B. blumei (Lindl].) J. J. Smith.” (Schlechter 
1928). 


The Jardine River plants appear to agree well with the descriptions of 
both taxa. Mr. Don Blaxell of Sydney, while acting as Australian Botanical 
Liaison Officer at Kew compared a specimen of this plant with specimens of 
B. masdevalliaceum from New Guinea and the Solomon Islands and found 
them to be identical. For this reason and because of Schlechter’s opinion quoted 
above, I have elected to place the Jardine River species in Kranzlin’s B. 
masdevalliaceum. 


Flowering time is uncertain, plants were collected in flower in August. 
(See figure 2b.) 


Bulbophyllum leratii (Schlechter) J. J. Smith, Bull, Jard. Bot. Buitenzorg Ser. 
28:25 (1912). 
Cirrhopetalum fleratii Schlechter, Repert. Spec. Nov. Regni Veg. 9:216 
(1911). 
Coox Districr: Cape York Peninsula, Tozer Ramge, 12°45’S; 143°43°R; Sep 1975, 
Lavarack ™.P. 3502 CBRI 201382). 


A rather rare epiphyte growing in dense rainforest at an altitude of about 
400 m. 


Figure 2a, Didymoplexus pallens Griff. A. Plant, B. | Figura aPs Bulbophyllum masdeyaillaceum Kranzlin. 


Flower from the frent, tabellum removed. Portion of plant. |. Petal. J. Golumn 
Fiower from the side, petals and from the front. K. Flower from the side, 
sepals removed. O. Lateral sepals. E, petals and sepals removed. L. Labelluns 


F, G, Labella from 3 plants, flatlened out, from above. 


66 


Plant consisting of a creeping rhizome with pseudobulbs 5-10 mm apart, 
12-18 mm long and 10~15 mm in diameter, with 4 or 5 prominent angles. 
Leaves erect, oblong, shortly petiolate, 6-8 x 2-3:5cm, rather thick, Inflores- 
cence 15-25 cm long, umbellate with 6-10 flowers arranged in a circle. Lateral 
sepals purple-red, connate for the basal 5 mm, 16-22 mm long and 1-5 mm wide 
at the dilated base, the apices drawn out into long filiform tails. Dorsal sepal 
purple-red, consisting of an ovate cuculate basal part 2-5 x 2mm fringed with 
moderately long cilia, and an apical filiform appendage 2mm long. Petals 
purple-red, 6 & 1mm at the broadest, with a filiform apical appendage, and with 
moderately long cilia on the basal half. Labellum white-cream, articulate on the 
column foot, recurved, fleshy, about 2mm in length. Column 2 mm in length, 
with a prominent foot 2mm long, stelidia present only as two short teeth near 
the apex. 


The author is indebted to Dr. Gunnar Seidenfaden of Copenhagen, Denmark 
for assistance in the identification of this species. Dr. Seidenfaden, the author of 
a recent work on the Cirrhopetalum section of the genus Bulbophyllum (Seiden- 
faden 1973) writes in a letter to the author: “I have been somewhat doubtful 
about this taxon (i.e. B, leratii) of which I did not succeed in getting the type 
specimen or other material. I felt that he (i.e. Schlechter) might just have a small 
specimen of B. gracillimum at hand. But clearly the flowers you sent me have 
lateral sepals that are only half as long as what is usual for B. gracillimum and it 
also seems from the picture that the leaves are relatively broader. So if these seem 
to be constant in the plants you now have living, I believe it would be reasonable 
to give Schlechter’s plant specific status.” Previously recorded from New 
Caledonia, this species appears to be limited in Australia to the Tozer and Janet 
Ranges, where it is by no means common. Vegetatively it is very similar to the 
other Australian member of the section Cirrhopetalum—-Bulbophyllum longi- 
florum Thouars (B. clavigerum (R. D. Fitzg.) F. Muell.)) but may be dis- 
tinguished when in flower by the much more slender lateral sepals. 


Most plants seen were growing low down on the trunks of rainforest trees 
in deep shade, but a few plants, including one in full flower, were seen on a 
windswept ridge growing on rather stunted trees. It appears to flower quite 
freely, each pseudobulb producing several inflorescences. 


Flowering time is uncertain. Plants were collected in flower in September 
and have flowered in cultivation in February. (See Figure 3a.) 


Taeniophyllum malianum Schlechter, Repert. Spec. Nov. Regni Veg. Beih. 
1:1022 (1914) and fig., op. cit. t. 363 No. 1404 (1928). 


Coox Distrricr: Cape York Peninsula, McIlwraith Range, 13°52’S; 143°25’E; Sep 1975, 
Lavarack N.P. 3501 CBRI 201383). 


A locally abundant epiphyte in rather open rainforest from about sea level 
to about 500 m altitude. 


Plant consisting of a short stem (10-20 mm), with the leaves reduced to 
small bracts which in time split to leave a covering of short stiff hairs; roots green, 
about {+5 mm thick, somewhat flattened about 20cm long. Inflorescence 2-4 cm; 
peduncle long, glabrous; rachis short, glabrous with very small, deltoid, densely 
packed bracts. Up to 15 flowers opening singly, each borne on a very short 
pedicel. Sepals and petals similar, yellow, oblong, obtuse about 4:5 « 1mm, 
the sepals slightly longer and broader than the petals. Labellum ovate, obtuse, 
indistinctly 3-lobed, 4 * 3mm, yellow; spur 4-5 > 1-5 mm diameter at the 
widest, somewhat dilated at the distal end, almost in line with the midlobe. 


67 


Figure 


3a. Bulbophyllum feratii 
(Schlechter.) J. J. Smith. A. 
Portion of plant. B. Flower 
from the side, petals and 
sepals removed. C. Flower 
from the front (note: only half 
of fateral sepals shown). 


2cm 


Figure 3b. Taeniophyllum matianum’ 


Schlechter, D. Plant.  £, 
inflorescence. F. Flower from 
the front. G. Flower from the 
side, petals and sepals 
removed, H. Pollinarium. 


68 


Column about 1mm long with short acute stelidia. Anther with a prominent 
straplike rostrum about 0-8 mm long and sharply curved up. Pollinia 4, stripe 
about 1mm, with a relatively large (about 1 mm) retinaculum. 


This epiphyte of the low to moderate elevations of the Mcllwraith Range 
usually grows low down on the tree trunks or on smaller branches, often forming 
a dense tangle of unattached or partly attached green roots. The flowers are 
yellow and no more than one per inflorescence opens at a given time. A large 
plant will produce 5 or 6 inflorescences. 


T. malianum is quite similar to T. flavum Dockr. but may be distinguished 
by its generally much larger flowers and short, glabrous rachis. 


Flowering appears to be spasmodic throughout the year with a possible 
emphasis on summer. (See Figure 3b.) 


Eulophia pulchra (Thouars) Lindl., Genera & Species Orchid. Plants: 182 
833). 


Limodorum pulchrum Thouars, Orch. Des Austr. Afr. tt. 43, 44 (1822). 
Eulophia macrostachys Lindl. loc. cit. 183 (1833). 


Eulophidium pulchrum (Thouars) Summerhayes, Bull. Bt. Jard, Bruxelles 
27:400 (1957). 


Coox District: Cape York Peninsula, Nesbit River Area, 13°27'S; 143°28’E; Sep 1974, 
Lavarack 1077 (BRI 220604). 


An uncommon terrestrial orchid occurring on hillsides in the dense shade of 
closed forests at low altitudes. 


Pseudobulbs to about 15 cm long and 2 cm diameter tapering upwards, 
Leaves 2, lanceolate; lamina to 30cm long and 10cm broad, with 3 prominent 
veins; petiole to 10 cm long. Inflorescence arising from near the base of the 
pseudobulb up to 80cm tall, of which the rachis makes up about half. Flowers 
numerous (at least 15 in the specimens examined) not opening widely, predom- 
inanily green with a few small areas of brown markings. Dorsal and lateral sepals 
similar, lanceolate 10-12 + 2-5-3 mm. Petals ovate 10-12 * 5mm, Labellum, 
in the Australian specimens examined, similar to the petals, but slightly broader 
with a very shallow saccate base. (In overseas specimens the labellum is 
described as having a short spherical spur, a 3-lobed blade with the side lobes 
erect; midlobe much broader than long, broadly cleft, a divided callus at its base) 
Column 5 mm long * 2mm with no apparent column foot. 


The plants from which this description was compiled were collected on the 
western slopes of the Macrossan Range in 1974 and subsequently flowered in 
cultivation, Two inflorescences have been examined and both had flowers 
anomalous in that the labellum was undivided and, in most regards, represented a 
third petal while there was no indication of the production of pollinia. I am 
indebted to Mr. Peter Taylor of Kew who confirmed my suspicions about the 
identity of this species saying: “I have examined your material and compared 
it with material of Eulophia pulchra (Thou.) Lindl. (£. macrostachya), and in 
my opinion they belong to that species but are abnormal in having a slightly 
malformed column and third petal in licu of a lip.” (P. Taylor in litt.) 


Whether all Australian plants of this species have these abnormalities 
remains to be proven. It was apparent that the Howers on the two inflorescences 
examined were seli-pollinating. 


E, pulchra is a widespread species having been previously recorded from 
Madagascar, Ceylon, India, Malaya, Philippines, New Guinea, New Caledonia 
and Fiji. Flowering appears to be confined to the winter months, about May to 
July. (See Figure 4a.) 


Figure 4a, Eulophia puichra (Thouars) 


Lindl A. Plant. B. Labeljum. 
C. Petal. BD. Sepal. E. Column 
from the side. F. Column from 
ihe front. 


b. Schoenorchis sarcophylia 
Schlechter. G. Plant. H, 
Labellum from above. I. 
Labellum and column from the 
side. J. Column from the 
front. K. Poilinia, L. Petal. M. 
Lateral sepal. N. Dorsal sepal. 


70 


Schoenorchis sarcophyila Schlechter, Repert. Spec. Nov. Regni Veg. Beih. 1:1022 
| (1914) and fig., op, cit. t. 347, No. 1340 (1928). 


Cook Disrricr: Cape York Peninsula, Leo Creek, 13°45’S; 143°23"R; Aug 1948, Brass 
18848 (BRI 080716). 


A rare epiphytic orchid at least in the Australian part of its range. Collected 
only from the outermost branchlets of Tristania exiliflora F. Muell. overhanging 
the fast-flowing Leo Creek at an altitude of 400m. 


Stems 1-5 cm long about 0-25 cm wide, branched in the larger specimens. 
Leaves linear, fleshy, channelled above, clasping the stem, up to 30mm long 
and 4mm wide. Inflorescence a sparsely branched panicle up to 5 cm long, with 
numerous very small flowers. Flowers white about 3mm long. Dorsal sepal 
elliptical, obtuse, about 1-5 mm long and 1 mm wide; lateral sepals ovate about 
the same size as the dorsal sepal; petals smaller, oblong about | mm long and 
0:75 mm wide. Labellum oblong 3mm long, about 1mm wide, with a well- 
developed spur about 0-8 mm long which is in line with the midlobe of the 
labellum. Lateral lobes small and not well defined, midlobe about 1 mm long. 
Column short and broad 0-8 mm long and 0:5 mm wide with a pair of minute 
sharply pointed stelidia immediately below the anther. Pollinia 4, ellipsoid, 
attached by a short stipe to the retinaculum. 


This small epiphyte has previously been recorded from New Guinea, Its 
range in Australia appears to be restricted, as it has only been seen in the 
vicinity of Leo Creek in the Mcllwraith Range. S. sarcophylla may be readily 
distinguished from the other Australian member of the genus (S$. densiflora 
Schlechter) by the position of the spur, which in S. sarcephylla forms a straight 
line or a very small angle with the midlobe of the labellum. In S. densiflora 
this angle is approximately 90°. 


Flowering time is uncertain but plants have been collected in flower in 
August. (See Figure 4b.) 


Dendrobium tozerensis P, Lavarack, species nova. 

Epiphyticum, D, baileyi F. Muell. simile. Caules 20-60 %« 0-1-0-2¢cm internodiis 
circa 0:6-1°2 cm longis, Folia multa lineari-lanceolata, 3~8 »« 0-4-0-8cm apice inaequaliter 
biloba, retusa. Flores albi binatim. Sepala dorsalia et petala anguste triangularia, circa 15 
“ 2mm, ad apicem acutum angustata. Sepala lateralia similaria praeter bases latiores. 
Labellum 8-10 *« 4 mm lobis lateralibus deltoideis 3 * 1 mm, midlobo anguste triangulari 
5 x 1:2mm margine crenulato praedito et pilis sparsim obtecto, disco crista longitudinali 
unica praedito, Columna circa 4 < 1-5 mm pede circa 4mm longo instructa, Typus: Coox 
District: Tozer’s Gap, Cape York Peninsula 12°43’8; 143°12’E, Aug 1975, Lavarack 990 
(BRI 220603, holotypus). 


Plants epiphytic, growing into large clumps. Stems 20-60 *« 0:1-0:2 cm, 
leafy in the upper half, the lower half covered with the remains of the sheathing 
bases of the leaves; internodes about 0:6-1:2 cm long; leaves numerous, linear- 
lanceolate, tapering gradually towards the apex, 3-8 «x 0-4-0-8¢cm, apex 
unequally bilobed, base sheathing. Flowers white in all parts, borne in pairs 
on a short peduncle of about 0:5 cm and a pedicel of about 0-5 cm, from one 
to 3 pairs of flowers opening at any one time on any stem. Dorsal sepal, lateral 
sepals and petals all similar, narrowly triangular, tapering to an acute tip, about 
15 2mm, the lateral sepals slightly broader at the base. Labellum 8-10 x 4 
mim; lateral lobes broadly triangular but with a rounded apex 3 & 1 mm; midlobe 
narrowly triangular 5 « 1:2mm with a crenulate margin and sparsely covered 


+ BO v. A. Plan Labellum fro 
the fro te. Oe Golan n fro mane 


72 


in short hairs; disc with a single longitudinal crest. Column short, about 5 & 2:5 
mm; with a column-foot about 4mm long; stigma scutiform, Another about 1 
<x Imm, about 0-5 mm high, rostrum not developed. 


In all the specimens examined (about 15 plants collected from localities as 
much as 5 or 6km apart) three anthers were present, the two lateral anthers 
being in all regards similar to the median anther. 


Vegetatively this plant closely resembles D. baileyi F. Muell. but may be 
separated from this when not in flower by the leaf tips which, in D. tozerensis 
are markedly unequally bilobed, while in D. baileyi they are only minutely so. 
Florally there are major differences in the shape of the floral segments. Flower 
colour is quite different being pure white for the former and yellow spotted 
with red or purple in the latter. 


D, tozerensis has so far been collected only in the vicinity of Tozer’s Gap 
where it is relatively common on the scattered trees growing on open rocky 
areas which occur in the midst of the rainforest. It occasionally grows on rocks, 
The flowering time appears to be during the summer in cultivation, but plants 
were collected in flower in September and it is possible it flowers spasmodically 
throughout the year. The flowers last for one day only before withering. (See 
Figure 5.) 


Oberonia carnosa P, Lavarack, species nova. 


Folia 4-6, 0:5-2-5 *« 0-3-0-8cm, carnosa triangularia ab base ad apicem acutum 
obtusumve angustata, Inflorescentia 30-60mm longa aurantiaca. Flores multi minuti 
aurantiaci circa 1mm longi. Sepala 0-6 «x O+-5 mm reflexa. Petala ovata margine 
crenulati-erosa, 0:8 *« 0:6mm. Labellum 1 « 0-7 mm, 3-lobatum, lobis lateralibus 
trapeziformibus 0:2 x O-2mm, midlobo 0:8 x 0-5 mm, margine laevi usque emarginato 
instructo, Celumna 0-4 x O:-3mm late alata. Anthera 0-2 « 0O-2mm rostra brevi sed 
prominenti praedita. Typus: Coox Disrricr: Tozer’s Gap, Cape York Peninsula 12° 43'S. 
143°12’E, Aug 1975, Lavarack 991 (BRI 220602, holotypus). 


Plant epiphytic growing into small clumps. Leaves 4—6, 0-5-2-5 x 
0-3-0:8 cm, ovate to deltoid usually tapering from the broad base to an acute 
or obtuse apex, fleshy and light green in colour. Inflorescence orange, 30—60 mm; 
the peduncle much shorter than the rachis with minute bracts arranged in 
whorls. Flowers numerous, minute about 1mm long, also in irregular whorls; 
floral bracts about 0-8mm long, ovary and pedicel about the same length. 
Sepals 0-6 & 0-5 mm, ovate, reflexed. Petals 0-8 * 0-6mm, ovate, margins 
crenulate-erose, Labellum 1 x 0-7 mm, 3-lobed; lateral lobes 0-2 «% 0-2 mm, 
trapeziform; midlobe 0-8 « 0:5, oblong; margin smooth to minutely crenulate, 
base saccate, apex obtuse or occasionally emarginate. Column 0:4 * 0:3 mm 
broadly winged below the anther, Anther 0-2 «K 0-2mm with a short but 
prominent rostrum. Pollinia 4, in 2 pairs, each pair elliptical. 


This plant has been collected only from the rocky areas at Tozer’s Gap 
which were previously described. It is strictly epiphytic often growing adjacent 
to Dendrobium tozerensis. 


While it is generally similar to one or two New Guinea species, O. carnosa 
appears to be most closely related to O. brachystachya Lindl. from South East 
Asia. . 


Flowering time appears tobe from.about February to June. (See Figure 6.) 


73 


Figure 6 Oberonia carnosa P. Layarack, sp. nov. A. Plant. B. Portion of inflorescence. 
CG. Flower from the front. D. Labellum and column from the front. E. Column 
from the stde. F. Anther from above. G. Petal. H. Poilinia. 


74 


Acknowledgements 


The author is indebted to the following people for help with certain of the 
identifications: Mr, D. F. Blaxell of Sydney, Dr. G. Seidenfaden of Copenhagen, 
Dr. L, A. Garay of Harvard University and Mr. P. Taylor of Kew. Mr. L. 
Pedley of the Queensland Herbarium prepared the Latin diagnoses for Dendrobium 
tozerensis and Oberonia carnosa. I also wish to express my appreciation to 
Mr. B. Gray and the Rev. R. Collins, both of Atherton who ably assisted me 
in the field and, in some cases, made the initial discoveries. The field work 
during which these collections were made was financed by the Queensland 
Government Department of Forestry, the National Parks and Wildlife Service 
of Queensland and the Australian Orchid Foundation. 


References 


SCHLECHTER, R. (1912). Die Orchidaceen von Deutsch-Neu-Guinea, Repert. Spec. Nov. 
Regeni Veg. Beth. 1:777. 


SEIDENFADEN, G. (1973). Notes on Cirrhopetaluim Lindl. Dansk Bot, Ark. 29 (1). 
Smity, J. J. (1911), Orchidaceae. Nova Guinea 8 (1):583. 


5S. R, Hampson, Government Printer, Brisbane 


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in the citation of specimens from Queensland, the localities are grouped according to 
the Pastoral Districts shown above, The boundaries of these Districts mostly follow watersheds 


except for those between North Kennedy District and South Kennedy District and between 
Gregory North District and Gregory South District, 


Compiled from maps issued by the Survey Office, Department of Lands, Brisbane; 


based on State Map 4a. 


CONTENTS 


Four new species of Eucalyptus. S. T. Blake 
Miscellaneous notes on Australian Pteridophytes, |. S.B. Andrews .. 
Notes on So/anum (Solanaceae) in Australia. R. J. F. Henderson 


The deletion of Pentapanax Seem. from the flora of Australia. 


W. R. Philipson 
Notes on Leguminosae, |. L. Pedley 


_ Allosyncarpia ternata, a new genus and species of Myrtaceae sub- 
family Leptospermoideae from northern Australia. S. T. Blake 


The genus Verticordia in northern Australia. N. B. Byrnes .. 
Polycarpaea (Caryophyllaceae) in Australia. L. Pediey 


Notes on Queensland Orchidaceae, |. P. J. Lavarack 


Page 


13 


23 


25 


43 


47 


49 


63