
It does not seem necessary to provide a complete list of species noted, but as, in general, only the commoner species have been mentioned in the body of the paper, attention may be drawn to the presence of certain of the rarer species. Of species previously recorded for Mount Peel I have failed to discover Veronica anomala, which is mentioned by Cheeseman in the Manual ed. 1 (1906), p. 523) on the authority of Armstrong. I have, however, observed certain narrow-leaved forms of Hebe buxifolia that, as Cheeseman remarks, approach Veronica anomala somewhat closely.

The species noted by me may be tabulated as follows:
[The section below cannot be correctly rendered as it contains complex formatting. See the image of the page for a more accurate rendering.]
| Families. | Genera. | Species. | |
| Pteridophyta | 9 | 26 | 61 |
| Gymnospermae | 2 | 2 | 4 |
| Monocotyledones | 9 | 42 | 104 |
| Dicotyledones | 52 | 120 | 317 |
| 72 | 190 | 486 |
There are 33 species of Polypodiaceae, 40 of Gramineae, 31 of Cyper-aceae, 27 of Onagraceae, 24 of Rubiaceae, 62 of Compositae, while there are 22 families represented by 1 species each. Of genera Carex has 18 species, Epilobium 24, Coprosma 17, Celmisia 11.
Attention may be drawn to the presence of: Gleichenia circinata var. hecistophylla—ridges in hillside forest, very rare; Cyathea Cunninghamii—plentiful in oen locality in hillside forest; Libocedrus Bidwillii—in hillside forest, rare; Hierochloe Fraseri var. recurvata—upper tall tussock-grassland; Deyeuxia Youngii var. Petriei—in Blechnum capense belt, rare; Deschampsia tenella—in lower fell-field, rare; Poa dipsacea—in herb-field, rare; Carex comans var. pulchella —in lower forest; Luzula Cheesemanii—in upper fell-field, rather rare; Astelia Petriei—in tall tussock-grassland, local; Korthalsella salicornioides—on Leptospermum ericoides, plentiful in one locality; Clematis foetida var.?—a small shrubland plant; Ranunculus Enysii —in herb-field, rare; Pittosporum Colensoi var.?—a small tree, very distinct from P. tenuifolium, and also from northern forms of P. Colensoi, not seen in flower or fruit, gully forest, rare; Carmichaelia flagelliformis—so named by the late Mr. Petrie, in lower subalpine scrub, rare; Edwardsia microphylla×prostrata—in débris scrub in one locality, near the Rangitata Gorge; Epilobium pedunculare var. minutiflorum—along stream beds, infrequent; Schizeleima hydrocoty-loides—by streams in herb-field, rare; Angelica decipiens—in tall tussock-grassland;×Hebe Kirkii—river terrace shrubland, very infrequent; Hebe Cheesemanii (= Veronica quadrifaria of the Manual) —Summit rocks, plentiful; Veronica linifolia—rocks by streamsides, noted in one locality only; Euphrasia Laingii—in herb-field; Plantago lanigera—very infrequent; Coprosma areolata—forest-margin, rare; Nertera Cunninghamii—exactly matching the North-west Nelson plant, noted in one locality only; Lobelia linnaeoides—herb-field, infrequent; Olearia Haastii—by streams in tussock-grassland, very rare; Olearia fragrantissima—Lynn Valley, not common; Celmisia incana var.?—a rock-plant near summit, possibly sp. nov., common; Celmisia coriacea×Lyallii—fell-field, rare;×Helichrysum Purdiei —by stremside, Lynn Valley, infrequent; Cotula pectinata—fell-field, infrequent.
The new species discovered were Gaya Allanii—forest-margins, a few plants noted; Hebe Allanii—a rock-plant in tussock-grassland, noted in two localities, and there common.
