2o6 The Ohio Naturalist. [Vol. V, No. 1, 



Mateuccia struthiopteris (L.) Todaro. {Onoclea strnthiop- 

 teris Hoffm.) ', Reported by Kellerman and Werner in their 

 Catalogue of Ohio Plants from "Lorain Co., A. A. Wright 

 (Cat.); Painesville, H. C. Beardslee^ (Cat.), Wm. C. Werner." 

 Doubtless to be secured for the State Herbarium. 



WooDsiA iLVENSis (L.) R. Br. Has been reported from Lick- 

 ing county by H. L. Jones, and should probably be regarded as 

 a member of the Ohio flora, although no specimens have been 

 seen by the writers. 



WooDsiA GLABELLA R. Brown. This was reported in the J. S, 

 Newberry Catalogue from Lorain county. It is a distinctively 

 northern fern, extending south only to New Hampshire, Ver- 

 mont, northern New York and the north shore of Lake Superior 

 and its occurrence in Ohio is extremely doubtful. 



Dryopteris cristata clintoniana (D. C. Eaton) Underw. 

 The single specimen from -Wayne county in the herbarium 

 belongs to the species, Dryopteris cristata (L.) Gray, rather than 

 to the variety, which is much larger, with pinnse four to six inches 

 long. It has been reported by Otto Hacker and by H. C. 

 Beardslee in his Catalogue of the Plants of Ohio. 



Dryopteris spinulosa dilatata (Hoffm.) Underw. Included 

 in the Fourth Catalogue on the authority of H. C. Beardslee. 



Dryopteris booth (Tuckerm.) Underw. Specimens in the 

 herbarium accredited to this species are all referable to other 

 species. 



Woodwardia areolata (L.) Moore. Listed in the New- 

 berry Catalogue from northern and eastern Ohio. 



Asplenium fontanum (L.) Bernh. Prof. Underwood men- 

 tions this fern as occurring at Lycoming, Pennsylvania and 

 Springfield, Ohio. The latter locality, however, is probabh' an 

 error due to confusing the labels, since the fern has never been 

 seen growing there, and the collector to whom it is accredited 

 can not remember it herself. 



Botrychium ternatum (Thunb.) Sw. All the Ohio speci- 

 mens formerly included under this name are Botrychium obli- 

 quum Muhl. Prof. Underwood has shown* that B. ternatum is 

 an Asiatic species occuring in China, Japan, and northern India, 

 and not at all in North America. 



Asplenium parvulum to be added. 



A critical study of the specimens of Asplenium in the State 

 Herbarium shows that one species is to be added to the list: 



Asplenium parvulum Mart. & Gal. A specimen of this 

 southern fern was collected by W. A. Kellerman in Greene town- 

 ship, Adams county, November 7, 1900. It was at the time con- 

 fused with Asplenium trichomanes L., and inserted in the 



*BuU. Torr. Club. 25:526. 



