306 BRYACE^. [Anomodon. 



4. A. apiculatus, Bruch & Schimp, Differs from the last 

 in the stems more divided and less flattened, the leaves more 

 densely areolate, and covered with longer papilloe, auriculate 

 and fimbriate-i3apillose at base, and the borders undulate, the 

 capsule longer and without annulus. — Bryol. Eur. Anomodon^ 

 6 ; Sulliv. Mosses of U. States, 58, and Icon. Muse. 120, t. 75. 

 Hypnwn liugelii, Muell. Syn. ii. 473, fide Lindb. 



Hab. On decayed logs, in mountain districts. 



5. A. viticulosus, Hook. & Tayl. Plants large, in wide 

 tufts, dark green above, ochreous within ; primary stems long, 

 creeping, the secondary erect, simple, or geniculate by repeated 

 innovations : leaves secund and subfalcate, crispate when dry, 

 ovate-lanceolate, blunt at the apex ; areolation very dense and 

 minutely jDaj^illose ; perichaetial leaves long, linear-acuminate 

 from an ovate base; costa strong: capsule long-cylindrical, 

 straight or slightly curved ; pedicel twisted ; operculum nar- 

 rowly conical ; teeth narroAvly lanceolate, sometimes irregular ; 

 segments filiform, fragile and irregular; annulus of a double 

 row of small cells. — Muse. Brit. ed. 2, 138, t. 22; Bryol. Eur. 

 t. 476. Ilypmim viticulosum, Linn. Spec. PI. 1127. 



Hab. Shaded rocks; Niagara Falls, sterile; Wisconsin {Lapham); 

 Owen Sound, Canada, fertile {Mrs. Boy). 



6. A. TOCCOSB, Sulliv. & Lesq. Habit, mode of growth 

 and color as in A. apiculatus : primary stems prostrate, naked 

 or beset with few small leaves and few radicles, the secondary 

 erect, simple or irregularly divided into short branches, densely 

 foliate, arched when dry: leaves open, erect, lanceolate-acute 

 from an ovate-oblong base, coarsely and unequally dentate 

 toward the apex, plicate at base and reflexed on the margins ; 

 meshes of the areolation very small, not papillose, round- 

 quadrate, in oblique rows ; costa stout, terete, subpercurrent ; 

 upper perichfetial leaves lanceolate, gradually narrowed into a 

 long filiform acumen, costate : fruit unknown. — Muse. Bor.- 

 Amer. Exsicc. n. 240 ; Sulliv. Mosses of TJ. States, 58, and 

 Icon. Muse. 121, t. 76, A. 



Hab. On rocks, near the base of Toccoa Falls, Northern Georgia 

 {Jjesquereux). 



7. A. Calif ornicus, Lesq. Loosely cespitose, dirty yellow 

 above, brown below ; secondary stems branching by innovations, 

 or continuous and simple, slender, angular when dry by the 

 appressed imbricated four-ranked leaves: leaves open when 



