CATALOGUE OF PLANTS, 413 
general appearance to the L. filiformis, Cunn., and, like it, 
invariably is found climbing the living trees, often to their - 
summits. In the membranaceous shorter pinne, rounded at 
the apex, and in the small size, it differs remarkably from 
that species. The name is given on account of the strong 
similarity which the fronds bear to the pinnated leaves of 
Pimpinella Saxifraga, or to Rosa pimpinellefolia. 
16. Polypodium tenellum, Br. 
17. —— pustulatum, Spr. 
18. —— pustulatum, Spr. 
19. Hymenophyllum demissum, Sw. 
20. Aspidium Aispidum, Sw. 
21. Polypodium viscidum, Colenso in Tasmanian Philoso- 
sd Journal. 
. 22. Hymenophyllum polyanthos, Sw. 
23. Parsonsia heterophylla, A. Cunn. 
24. Myoporum letum, Forst. 
25. Brachyglottis repanda, Forst. 
26. Clematis hexasepala, DC. 
27. Metrosideros florida, Sm. 
28. Gaultheria antipoda, Forst. 
29. Leiospermum, racemosum, Don. 
30. Parsonsia heterophylla, A. Cunn. 
31. Brachyglottis Rani ? A. Cunn. 
32. Panax arboreum, Forst. 
33. Leiospermum racemosum, Don. 
34. Myoporum letum, Forst. 
35. Carmichaelia australis, Br. 
36. Pimelea virgata, Vahl. | 
= 37. P. prostrata, Vahl.—These specimens agree with 
Others of a very common Bay of Island plant, which Mr. A. 
Cunningham sent home, under the name of P. arenaria, mss. ; 
utis very different from the ordinary forms of that species, 
9.59 & 60). It is, however, liable to great variation, the 
nchlets being often very tortuous, and hairy or silky, and 
leaves more or less densely and quadrifariously imbri- 
fated ; the P. Urvilleana, A. Rich, is hardly distinct from this. 
