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Volume 15, 1882
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Art. XXXII.—On a new Composite Plant.

[Read before the Philosophical Institute of Canterbury, 30th November, 1882.]

Glossogyne (?) hennedyi, sp. nov.

Plant a small excessively and irregularly branched under-shrub, from 6 to 12 inches high. Stem short, terete; bark pale brown; upper branches very slender, tetragonous, furrowed, bright green, hispid with stiff hairs. Leaves alternate, distant, from ¼ to ⅓ inch in length, sessile, linear-acute or subspathulate, entire or bi- or tridentate, midrib pellucid; under surface with short stiff hairs; upper or bract leaves linear-lanceolate, acute, small. Flower heads yellow ⅜ inch in diameter, single, terminal on the end of a short peduncle; receptacle conical, chaffy. Involucre campanulate: bracts equal, in two rows, the outer linear, blunt, with a tuft of rigid hairs at the

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apex; the inner narrower, linear-lanceolate, acute: all the bracts hispid on the back. Florets of the ray female, ligulate, acute, recurved; style slender, inclined, stigma linear, bifid, rounded at the apex, minutely papillose. Florets of the disc tubular, from two to ten, hermaphrodite; corolla fivelobed hispid at the spreading and slightly recurved apex; style shorter and stouter than in the ligulate florets, the stigma strongly papillose, bifid, linear, blunt at the apex; stamens five, inserted on the corolla, filaments free, shorter than the anthers, anthers scarcely cohering, obtuse at the base and without any terminal appendage; pappus of six to eight irregular awns, two or three of which are long and spreading, the others very short. There are always either three or five patent awns on one of the angles, and of these the centre one is longer than the others. All the awns are slightly confluent at the base and all are barbed with retrorse, single - celled, stiff hairs. Achenes sub-tetragonous, obconic, slightly compressed, hispid, with two of the angles minutely winged; very persistent on the receptacle. Glossogyne hennedyi, Brown, nat. size.

Hab. Godley Head, Banks Peninsula; on clay soil facing the north. Flowering from September to March.

This species differs from Glossogyne in the short peduncles, the rounded apex of the stigma; the obconic achenes, and greater number of awns, as well as their peculiar arrangement. I have named it after Mr. Roger Hennedy, lecturer on botany at Andersonian University, Glasgow, my former teacher.