TL;DR: A review of this cluster of taxa indicates that Gevuina should again be interpreted as restricted to South America and that the generic name Bleasdalea F. v. ex Domin should be adopted for a group of five species extending from Queensland and New Guinea to the New Hebrides and Fiji.
Abstract: A B S T R A C T The genus Kermadecia (Proteaceae), originally described as endemic to New Caledonia, has been expanded in recent decades to include three species from the New Hebrides and Fiji. Specialists on the Proteaceae have suggested that the three Melanesian species were generically misplaced, and careful reexamination supports this viewpoint. It is now apparent that a distinct group within the subfamily Grevilleoideae is composed of the genera Euplassa (endemic to South America), Sleumerodendron (a monotypic New Caledonian genus), Gevuina (based on a single South American species but recently expanded to include two other species from Queensland and New Guinea), and the three questionable Melanesian species. A review of this cluster of taxa indicates that Gevuina should again be interpreted as restricted to South America and that the generic name Bleasdalea F. v. Muell. ex Domin should be adopted for a group of five species extending from Queensland and New Guinea to the New Hebrides and Fiji. The relationships of the four genera are discussed and within Bleasdalea four new combinations are proposed: B. bleasdalei (F. v. Muell.), B. ferruginea (A. C. Sm.), B. vitiensis (Turrill), and B. lutea (Guillaumin). Kermadecia, very distinct from the four genera under present consideration, is again interpreted as a New Caledonian endemic. THE FAMILY PROTEACEAE, with more than 1,300 species widely distributed in tropical and subtropical areas, mostly in the Southern Hemisphere (Sleumer, 1955b), has been the subject of several recent studies, but the taxonomy and evolution of various infrafamilial taxa still require clarification. The extensive literature dealing with many aspects of the Proteaceae has been capably reviewed by Johnson and Briggs (1963) and Venkata Rao (1971); the latter of these treatments is the most comprehensive review of the