126 THE BOTANY OF BERMUDA. 



v.— Hepatic^. 

 Jungermannia, sp. 



Sphagnum palustre. Bog moss. 



VI. — Fungi. 



The common mushroon, Agaricum campestris, Linn., appears rarely in 

 Bermuda. They were to be found in 1852 near Pembroke church- 

 yard. (Mr. Hurdis, in The Naturalist in Bermuda, p. 176.) The writer 

 has, however, never seen them wild. They were grown at Mount Lang- 

 ton in an artificial cave from spawn imported from Halifax, and at times 

 pretty abundant. The fungi of Bermuda, as an order, have not received 

 attention. 



