1908] Evans,— Notes on New England Hepaticae,— VI 191 
New England station for this species is Quidquisset, Rhode Island 
(Bennett). It probably reaches its northern limit in southern New 
England, but its range extends southward into Brazil. The reasons 
for separating this and the preceding species from Archilejeunea are 
fully stated by the writer in Torreya 7: 225-229. 1908. ‘The same 
paper also calls attention to the fact that Archilejeunea Sellowiana 
Steph. must be considered a synonym of Lejeunea unciloba Lindenb. 
For descriptions and figures of L. clypeata and L. unciloba, see Evans, 
Mem. Torrey Club 8: 122-128. pl. 16. 1902. 
11. FRULLANIA SELWYNIANA Pears. List of Canadian Hepat. 1. . 
pl. 1. 1890. Evans, Trans. Conn. Acad. 10: 29. pl. 13, f. 10-17. 
1897. Frullania Sullivantiae Aust. Bull. Torrey Club 3: 16. 1872 
(not F. Sullivantit Aust. 1869). Оп bark of Thuja occidentalis. 
Shores of Schoodic Lake, Piscataquis Co., Maine (А. W. E.). New 
to New England. ‘The type specimens were collected by Macoun near 
the mouth of Ste. Anne des Monts River, Gaspé County, Quebec. 
The species is also known from several localities in Ohio, Austin’s 
specimens of F. Sullivantiae having been collected near Urbana. F. 
Selwyniana looks at first sight like a small form of F. Asagrayana, 
resembling it in color and in glossiness. It also agrees in having 
blunt leaves, each marked by a median row of ocelli or discolored 
cells. It may be at once distinguished, however, by its autoicous 
inflorescence and by the fact that the female flower terminates the 
main stem or a leading branch instead of being borne on a short and 
simple branch. The coarsely dentate perichaetial bracts are also a 
striking feature. | 
12. ANTHOCEROS Масосхп М. A. Howe, Bull. Torrey Club 25: 
19. pl. 326, f. 1-9. 1898. Along a roadside. Mechanics Falls, 
Androscoggin County, Maine (J. A. Allen). This interesting 
species was based on specimens collected by Macoun at the outlet 
of Leamy's Lake, near Hull, Quebec, and distributed in Canadian 
Hepaticae 81, as A. punctatus. It has since been found near Winona, 
Minnesota, by Holzinger' and is now known therefore from three 
widely separated localities. It agrees with A. punctatus in its dark- 
colored spores but differs, as Howe clearly shows, in its shorter cap- 
sules, in its muriculate spores, the roughness extending over both the 
inner and the outer surfaces, and in its scanty or abortive sterile cells 
or pseudo-elaters. In A. punctatus the spores are echinulate or 
1 Bryologist 10: 13. 1907. 
