Page:Flora Australiensis Volume 5.djvu/594

This page has been validated.
582
CIV. PROTEACEÆ.
[Dryandra.

Var. elegans. Leaves as in the typical form divided into numerous small segments with revolute margins white underneath; flower-heads and flowers smaller, the perianths more villous.—D. elegans, Meissn. in DC. Prod. xiv. 473.—W. Australia, Drummond, 4th coll. n. 317, Maxwell. In the only capsule I could examine I found only one perfect seed with two equal wings, each formed of 2 plates, probably the outer integuments of both seeds had attained their full growth and become consolidated at the base, the nucleus of one of them having aborted.

42. D. proteoides, Lindl. Swan Riv. App. 33. Very near D. tenuifolia, the stems more scaly, the leaves longer, broader although always under ½ in. broad, more rigid, divided into triangular rigid lobes contiguous or distant, very acute or even pungent-pointed or rarely almost obtuse. Flower-heads larger than in D. tenuifolia, on short lateral peduncles covered with imbricated scales without floral leaves. Involucre broadly ovoid, with very numerous broad black glabrous bracts, the innermost rows very much longer than the others and often attaining 3 in. Perianths not exceeding the involucre, glabrous or nearly so, the limb four lines long. Style about as long as the perianth, with a faintly sulcate but not thickened stigmatic end.—Meissn. in Pl. Preiss. i. 598, and in DC. Prod. xiv. 478.

W. Australia. Swan river, Drummond, 1st coll., Preiss, n. 503.

Var. ferruginea. Leaf-lobes rather broader, less acute and most distant, but not always so.—D. ferruginea, Kipp. in Hook. Kew Journ. vii. 123; Meissn. in DC. Prod. xiv. 478.—W. Australia, Drummond, 5th coll. n. 416.

43. D. runcinata, Meissn. in DC. Prod. xiv. 469. A dwarf shrub, the stems scarcely any or the leafy branches scarcely above ½ ft. long. Leave 6 in. to nearly 1 ft. long, deeply divided into numerous triangular lanceolate or falcate acute lobes, the largest ½ in. long, with recurved margins, tomentose several-nerved and reticulate underneath. Flower-heads nearly sessile, terminal or lateral. Involucres ovoid, 2 in. long, entirely like those of D. obtusa, as well as the flowers and style.

W. Australia. Drummond, 4th coll. n. 318.

44. D. obtusa, R. Br. in Trans. Linn. Soc. x. 214, Prod. 398. Stems short and procumbent, tomentose-villous or concealed by imbricate scales. Leaves 6 in. to 1 ft. long, divided to the midrib or nearly so into numerous small triangular or oblong very obtuse segments, 1½ to 4 lines long, thick, with revolute margins, white underneath. Flower-heads terminal with a few floral leaves rather below them. Involucres ovoid, 2 in. long, the outer bracts short, ovate, passing into the long narrow inner ones, all obtuse, at first loosely tomentose, but soon quite glabrous turning black and finely striate like those of the three preceding species. Perianth nearly as long as the involucre, the tube slightly pubescent, the limb narrow, glabrous or hairy, 3 lines long. Style about as long as the perianth, the stigmatic end long narrow and furrowed.—Meissn. in DC. Prod. xiv. 471; D. multiserialis, F. Muell. Fragm. v. 185.

W. Australia. King George's Sound or to the eastward (Lucky Bay?) R. Brown, Baxter, Drummond, 5th coll. n. 420; inland from Cape Legrand, Maxwell.