412 CATALOGUE OF PLANTS. 
and Pimelee must not be considered as definitively settled in 
regard to their nomenclature: they, and a few species of 
other families, will require more time for their correct deter- 
mination than it is now in our power to command. The 
numbers correspond to those distributed with the specimens; 
and these latter were, we believe, all gathered in the neigh- 
bourhood of Wellington. 
1. Asplenium dulbiferum, Forst.—This specimen in com- 
mon with others I have seen from New Zealand, is not pro- 
liferous, and hence perhaps not truly distinct from A. laxum, 
Br.—Vid. Brown, Prodr. p. 151. 
2. Lomaria discolor, Willd. 
3. Aspidium hispidum, Sw. 
4. Lycopodium volubile, Forst. (barren). 
5. Cenopteris flaccida, Sw. 
6. Polypodium fenellum, Br. 
7. ——— —— Billardieri, Br. 
8. Asplenium falcatum, Sw. — 
9. lucidum, Forst. 
10. Lomaria procera, Spr., (Barren frond). 
11. , (Fertile and barren frend). 
12. Todea pellucida, Hook. 
13. Adiantum affine, Willd. 
14, Pteris macilenta, A. Rich. oe 
15. Lomaria pimpinellefolia, Hook. fil. ; caudice longissimo 
filiformi scandente atro squamoso, squamis sparsis subulatis 
patentibus, stipitibus gracilibus remote squamulosis, frondibus 
lanceolatis pinnatis, pinnis remotis alternis v. sub-opposits 
ellipticis sessilibus basi obliquis pinnatifido-serratis mem - 
branaceis, laciniis obtusiusculis supremis decurrentibus con- | 
fluentibus, rachibus pilosis. ies 
For our first knowledge of this plant we are indebted to 
Mr. Frazer, but it has since been found abundantly in various : 
parts of the Northern Island, and especially in the neighbour 
hood of the Bay of Islands: nowhere, however, in a state 9 - 
fructification, whence probably it has remained undescri "S 
by Mr. Cunningham. It is closely allied, both in habit an® 
