674 UnpERWoop: A REVIEW 
slightly more produced, 6-9 cm. long, 1.5—2 cm. wide, abruptly 
short-pointed with the apex sharply denticulate: veins mostly 
simple, the intercostal spaces 8-9 to 1 cm.; stipes of sporophylls 
14-24 cm. long with about 9-11 pairs of pinnae besides the ter- 
minal, unequally rounded at base, sharp-pointed, 6—g cm. long, 2 
cm. wide ; rachis winged; terminal pinna about the length of those 
of the upper pairs. 
Southern West Indies. - 
Trinipap: Fendler, 147, C (type) EKN. 
GRENADA: Sherring, K. 
Dominica: Nicholls, 194, K. 
St. Lucia: H. B. Murray, K. 
?>Martinigue: Hahn, 59, K. This plant approaches D. 
fendleri very closely but has the pinnae slightly larger. 
The species approaches D. a/ata closely but is smaller, has 
more closely placed veins, and a very different habit. 
6. DANAEA STENOPHYLLA Kunze, Die Farrnkrauter, I: 55- pl. 
28. 1840 
A small species with long-stalked sporophylls and closely 
placed simple veins. Rootstock unknown; rachises covered 
with a scurfy brown pubescence ; sterile leaf with about 14 
pairs of narrow pinnae and a similar terminal one, all short- 
stalked, about 1.7 cm. apart, rounded at base, tapering ae 
gradually to a sharply denticulate point, 11-14 cm. long, Lor 
cm. wide ; veins mostly simple, the intercostal spaces about 12 to 
I cm.; stipe of sporophyll elongate, 65 cm. long, with 12-14 
pairs of pinnae besides the terminal, 7-8.5 cm. long, 5-7 pes 
wide, short-stalked, accurately rounded at base and rather aD- 
ruptly acute at apex. 
GuapELoure: L’ Herminier, 213, K (ex. herb. Fee). 
This species appears to be known only from this island, though 
Jenman confused another species with it and reported it as “ plenti- 
ful” in Jamaica. Presl (Suppl. Tent. Pterid. 38. 1845) made this 
species the type of the genus Heterodanaca, but we see now no 
reason for separating it from the rest of the genus. 
7. Dawara cuspipata Liebm. Mex. Bregner, 155- 1849 
Stipe of sterile leaves with mostly two nodes, 25 oF ee oe 
long ; pinnae 14-19 pairs, 8.5-10 cm. long, about 1.5 nee 
rather blunt at base, tapering gradually into a long-acu 
