i6o 



P. ang. cristatum Hawkins. Found by the Rev. E. H. 



Hawkins in Co. Cork about 1905. Very well crested 



at all terminals and with finely toothed pinnules, akin 



to those of the pevcristatnm section but not crested. 



(No. I, p. 24, No. 10, pp. 247, 248.) 

 P. ang. phimosisshmwi pelhicidiim. One of a batch raised by 



H. Stansfield of Sale, and strongly resembling P. ang. 



pUimosissimiim Birkenhead, but even more delicately 



fashioned. (No. 12, pp. 294-6.) 

 P. ang. capitatum Walpole. Found in Queen's County, 



Ireland. A very heavily crested form with, as is usual 



with the ** capitate" section, only very minute crests 



to the pinnae. (No. 17, p. 123.) 

 P. ang, covymhifenim Walton. Raised by Mr. J. Walton. 



Very fine, with dense, heavy, round, terminal crest to 



fronds and fine well-developed ones to the pinnae. 

 P. ang. tvipinnatum falcatiim Walton. Raised. Bold 



grower, thrice divided, and with lower pinnules markedly 



falcate. 

 P. ang. foHosuni Walton. Raised. A fine foliose form. 

 P. ang. byachiatnm cvistatuni Walton. Raised. Distinctly 



brachiate, but different in make from previously known 



" brachiatums." 



N.B. — The last four, see No. 17, p. 125, are selections 



from a large number of very fine Polystichums raised by 

 Mr. Walton. 



P. angulave plumosuni ramnlosissimum R. Bolton. Raised 

 from a mixed sowing and pedigree untraceable. A 

 most remarkable plumose form and very beautiful. We 

 give an illustration of a single pinna with a normal 

 pinna to show extreme difference. The sub-divisions 

 are very slender and ramify persistently and so exten- 

 sively that the frond resembles a mass of moss on the 

 finest plumose lines. The frond tip is undivided. The 

 plant is profusely bulbiferous almost to the top and 

 produces bulbils even on the secondary stopes of the 



