HEPATICH NOVA ZELANDLE, &c. 579 
From the European Jung. spinulosa, Dicks., the present 
species is known by its smaller size, the close revolution of 
the superior margins of its leaves, the dimidiato-cordate 
figure of these, and by their larger cellules. 
(Jungermannia, L. Char. emendatus Neesii.) 
7. J. colorata, Lind. et Lehm. 
Has. Van Diemen’s Land. 
8. J. subtrifida, n. sp.; caule cespitoso erecto subsimplici 
apice incrassato incurvo, folis laxe imbricatis erectis se- 
cundis stipulisque concavis ovalibus bi-trifidis integerrimis. 
Has. Van Diemen's Land. 
Tufts rather loose, pale brown. Stems nearly two inches 
high ; branches few, slender, upright. Leaves loosely imbri- 
cated below, more closely towards the thickened summits of 
the stems, very tumid, the lower usually bifid, the upper 
trifid, the segments short, lanceolate, subapiculate. 
This has the habit of Jung. madida, nobis, from Hermite 
Island, Cape Horn; the leaves, however, are far less nume- 
Tous, less imbricated and more erect, while the trifid summits 
of the upper ones are very characteristic. 
(Gymnanthe, Tayl.) 
9. J. tenella, nobis ante, p. 377. 
Haz. Van Diemen’s Land. 
10. J. Urvilleana, n. sp.; Plagiochila (Scapania) Urvilleana, 
Mont., Voy. au Pol. Sud, t. 16, f. 2. 
Has. Van Diemen’s Land. 
(Lophocolea, Nees v. Esenbeck.) 
ll. J. lenta, nobis ante, p. 379. 
Haz. Van Diemen's Land. 
(Chiloscyphus, Nees v. Esenbeck.) 
... 12. J. sinuosa, Hook. Muse. Exot. t. 113. 
. Haz. Van Diemen’s Land. 
= 2032 
