692 FILICES. 
Osmunda spectabilis, Willd., 8. palustris, Presl; Liebm. Mexicos Bregner, p. 152. 
Osmunda regalis, Linn., var. spectabilis, Willd., 8. brasiliensis, Kunze in Linnea, xviii. p. 308. 
Osmunda mexicana, Fée, 9° Mém. Foug. p. 43. 
Osmunda palustris, Schrader ; Link, Fil. Hort. Berol. p. 20. 
Canapa southward on the eastern side.—NortH Mexico, Sierra Madre (Seemann, 
1950); Sour Mexico, Huatusco (Liebmann), Jalapa 4000 feet ( Galeotti, 6388 ; Linden, 
2), Chiapas &c. (Ghiesbreght, 299), region of Orizaba (Bourgeau, 2791); GUATEMALA, 
Coban (Godman & Salvin), Alta Vera Paz (Tiirckheim).—Eastern SouTH AMERICA to 
Brazil, and very widely spread in the OLD WorLp.—Hb. Kew. 
Suborder IV. SCHIZHACEZ. 
Of this Suborder there are five genera; those not represented within our limits 
being, Mohria, an African monotype, and Trochopteris, also a monotype, and only 
represented in the Kew Herbarium from South Brazil; but it has been erroneously 
recorded as having been found in Cuba by Fée (Fil. Antil. p. 125). 
42. SCHIZA. 
Schizea, Smith ; Hook. et Bak. Syn. Fil. p. 428, t. 8. fig. 64. 
A genus of about sixteen species, very widely spread in temperate and subtropical 
regions, though not represented in Europe. There is one endemic North-American 
species, which inhabits Nova Scotia and New Jersey, and there is one that has hitherto 
only been found in the Auckland and Falkland Islands. Another, S. dichotoma, has a 
wide range both in the Old World and America, reaching Venezuela and Cuba, and 
probably also occurring in Central America. 
1. Schizzea (Lophidium) elegans, Swartz; Hook. et Bak. Syn. Fil. p. 430; 
Fourn. Mex. Pl. Enum. i. p. 139; Hook. Gard. Ferns, t. 54; Liebm. Mexicos Bregner, 
p- 149. 
Lophidium elegans, Presl, Suppl. p. 77. 
Acrostichum elegans, Vahl, Symb. ii. p. 104, t. 50. 
South Mexico, Cordillera of Oaxaca, 4000 feet (Galeotti, 6536), Jocotepec (Lieb- 
mann).— West InDizs to Perv, Guiana, and Brazit. Hb. Kew. 
43. ANEMIA. 
Anemia, Swartz (Aneimia, auct. plur.) ; Hook. et Bak. Syn. Fil. p. 431, et ed. 2, p. 525, t. 8. fig. 65. 
Of the twenty-seven species of this genus, twenty-six are American, ranging from the 
South-eastern States of North America to Peru and South Brazil. The remaining one 
is endemic in South Africa. 
1. Anemia adiantifolia, Swartz; Hook. et Bak. Syn. Fil. p. 434; Ch. et Schl. 
in Linnea, v. p. 621; Fourn. in Bull. Soc. Bot. France, xix. p. 261, et Mex. Pl. Enum. 
