Se SE B or — ito d i: 
8. Flabellatum group. 
Fronds dichotomously pedate-flabellate. 
A. flabellatum, Linn. (v v.) ; A. patens, Willd. (v v.) ; A 
pedatum, Willd. (v v.) ; A. hispidulum, Sw. (v v.) ; A. setu- 
losum, J. Sm. (v v.); A. fulvum, Raoul. (v v.). : 
9. Tenerum group. 
Fronds dichotomously decompound. 
tX tenerum, Sw. (v v.). 
Oss.—A remarkable Fern has of late years appeared in 
garden collections under the name of A. Farleyense, it has 
_ the same habit as A. tenerum, but is much larger in size 
and in all its parts, and which has led it to become a | 
favourite exhibition plant, it however does not produce ` ` 
fructification, and there being no wild specimens in herbaria, 4 
-it is, therefore, supposed to be a hybrid, and to have - 
originated in a garden in Barbadoes. Ce 
A. Henslovianum, Hook. fil.; A. rubellum, Moore; A. 
Veitchianum, Moore; A. sessilifolium, Moore; A. chilense, 
Kaulf. (v v); A. sulphureum, Kaulf. (v v.) ; A. emar- 
ginatum, Bory. (v v.); A. fragile, Sw. : 
10. Capillus- Veneris group. 
Fronds compound multifid, slender, segments generally 
cuneiform, flabellate. 
.... 4. Capillus-Veneris, Linn. (v v.); A. ZEthiopicum, Linn. ` 
— (vv); A. cuneatum, Lang and Fich. (v v.); A. glauco- 
- phyllum, Hook.; A. venustum, Don.; A. assimile, Sw. 
(v v.); A, concinnum, H. D. K. (v v); A. eolpodes, 
Moore (v. v.); A. tinctum, Moore (v v.); A. amabile, 
Moore, S 
