posted on 2023-11-22, 22:49authored byFerdinand von Mueller
In instituting recently a census of the genera of the whole Australian vegetation, I had to give to the remarkable alpine plant, first described by De Candolle as Gnaphalium catipes, a generic place also, its position thus far having never yet been firmly settled. Examining the plant first from localities in the Victorian Alps, I placed it in Antennaria, and described it as A. nubigena already in 1854 (Transact. Phil. Soc. of Victoria, i., 45), alluding already to the likelihood of its identity with Gunn's plant, sent by Lindley to the elder De Candolle; but I had no Tasmanian specimens at that time to establish its sameness with the one of the Australian Alps. In assigning to it a position among the species of Antennaria, I was careful to point out at once that it did not altogether accord with the characteristics of the legitimate congeners, our plant not being strictly dioecious. Indeed I was then already considering whether it ought not to find its most appropriate place in Leontopodium, notwithstanding the generally solitary capitula, and the biformity of the flower heads.
History
Publication title
Papers & Proceedings and Report of the Royal Society of Tasmania
Pagination
44-46
Rights statement
In 1843 the Horticultural and Botanical Society of Van Diemen's Land was founded and became the Royal Society of Van Diemen's Land for Horticulture, Botany, and the Advancement of Science in 1844. In 1855 its name changed to Royal Society of Tasmania for Horticulture, Botany, and the Advancement of Science. In 1911 the name was shortened to Royal Society of Tasmania..