332 BULLETIN OP THE UNIVERSITY OP WISCONSIN. 



400. Neckera Meiiziesii liiunobioides Ren. & Card. — Habit of a 

 Limnobium, soft and dilated, cespitose, dark-rufescent: leaves smooth, 

 or scarcely undulate, short, entire or obsoletely denticulate above, obtuse 

 or apiculate, areolation lax, costate to middle or beyond. — Bot. Centralbl. 

 44: 422. 1890. 



401. Neckera peterantlia C. M. & Kindb. — Subspecies of N. oligo- 

 carpa: secondary stems nearly simple, about 1 dm. long, rigid and more 

 robust: leaves larger and more crowded, one branch of the costa prolonged 

 sometimes to middle: antheridia and archegonia very numerous: capsule 

 emergent. Mac. Cat. 1G2. — On rocks: Rocky Mountains, B. C. 



402. Neckera Douglasii Macounii Kindb. — Leaves less attenuate: cap- 

 sule turgid oval, completely exserted on long pedicel. Mac. Cat. 163. — 

 Hanging in long festoons from limbs of trees in shady woods: British 

 Columbia and Vancouver Island. 



403. Hoiualia Macouuii C. M. & Kindb. — Very nearly allied to H. tri- 

 chomanoides : leaves longer, rather Ungulate, lowest basal cells yellowish; 

 perichfBtial leaves more suddenly narrowed to very short acumen: segments 

 of peristome cleft between articulations. Mac. Cat. 163. — H. triehoman- 

 oides and H. obtusata Lesq. & James, Manual 285. — Canada; Newfound- 

 land; British Columbia and Vancouver. 



404. Pterig-ynaadram llliforme heteropteriim Sch. — Plants morero- 

 bust, darker green; branches shorter and larger: leaves secund, oval, spat- 

 ulate, rounded and shortly apiculate at summit. Husnot, Muse. Gall. 311. 

 — Washington. 



405. Pterigynandrum papillosulnm C, M. & Kindb. — Differs from 

 P. filiforme in branch leaves acuminate and acute, denticulate nearly all 

 round, less papillose; branches blunt and turgid as in the variety heterop- 

 terum of this species. Mac. Cat. 165. — On rocks: British Columbia. 



406. Antitricliia Californica ambigua Ren. & Card.— Branches not 

 julaceous: leaves not so closely imbricate, generally subsecund and nar- 

 rower; cells longer: pedicel often flexuous. Resembles inhabit A. curti- 

 pendula, but differs in cylindrical, narrow capsule, perichfetial leaves 

 longer acuminate, and shorter cells. Bot. Gaz. 15:59. 1890. — Portland, 

 Oregon. 



406a. Antitricliia tenella Kindb. — Tufts loose, green: secondary stems 

 irregularly divided; branchlets numerous, the greater number very short: 

 leaves small, sub-patent or loosely appressed when dry, ovate-acute or 

 short-acuminate, dentate at apex, not striate, reflexed to apex: greater 

 number of cells short, inner and middle narrow; costa with 1-2 accessory 

 branches at base; disappearing below apex; perigonial leaves elongate: 

 dioicous: female plants unknown. Mac. Cat. 165. — On rocks: Nanimo 

 River, Vancouver Is. 



