COLLECTION OF BORNEAN MOSSES. 305 
Peradeniya Gardens, Ceylon, for example, has the cancellina outline of 
C. Thwaitesii, but in size and other characters is nearer C. Fordii. 
If the two are united I suppose that the name C. Fordii, as the earlier, 
must stand. 
CALYMPERES TENERUM, O. Muell. Coconut palm, Sandakan (No. 31); 
Tawao (No. 138). 
Brotherus attributes smooth cells to С. tenerum (he describes С. subtenerum 
from Siam as having papillose cells). Fleischer, however, describes the cells 
of C. tenerum as more or less рарШозе. Mr. Binstead’s No. 31 has papillose 
cells. - 
C. Dozyanum, Mitt. Tree, Sandakan (No. 32, f. elata); Simporna 
(No. 131). The former plant is a robust form with stems almost an inch 
high; a similarly robust form occurs in the British Museum collection. 
The Simporna plant 15 a deep green form with the leaves very rigid and 
scarcely incurved when dry, but I can find no structural differences. 
C. HYOPHILACEUM, С. Muell. Tree in jungle, Tenom (No. 156). 
3. ЧЕРРИ, Besch. Coconut palm, Sandakan (No. 36), det. Thériot. This 
species, so far as I know hitherto only recorded from the original station— 
an unknown locality—in Java, is much like С. Dozyanum in many respects, 
but differs from it, inter alia, in the presence of a teniole. M. Thériot 
writes that the Sandakan plant only differs, very slightly, from the type of 
С. (терри in the leaves less spreading when moist, the normal ones with the 
apex broadly rounded, He adds that Bescherelle describes the teniole of 
C. (терри as formed of 3-4 rows of cells at the shoulder, and of 5 at the 
base, while in Mr. Binstead’s plant the teniole is narrower at the base 
(2-3 rows wide) ; however, the difference is not one of importance, for in 
Bescherelle’s own type-specimen some of the leaves show the teniole equally 
narrow below. 
C. Morzeyi, Mitt. Coconut palm, island near Sandakan (No. 37); 
coconut palm, Sandakan (No. 39); tree, Labuan I. (No. 119). 
C. STBINTEGRUM, Broth. (Pl. 27. Вр. 9.) Decayed wood in shade, 
Sekong (No. 79). The leaves in this plant show a rather remarkable form of 
mamillosity of the upper cells, which are quite smooth at the back, but highly 
protuberant on the ventral surface, as in the genus 7immiella. Brotherus 
describes the cells as ‘alte mamillosis " simply, without specifying on which 
surface, but an original specimen which he has kindly sent me (Siam, 
Schmidt, 1900) shows exactly the structure of the Bornean plant (cf. PI. 27. 
fig. 9). Hitherto known only from the original station. 
LINN. JOURN.—BOTANY, VOL. XLIII. Y 
