776 OXLVII. FILIOES. [Grammitis. 
middle of the pinna, sometimes almost edm the surfacc.—F. Muell. 
Fragm. v. 137 ; Gym aeeie —— Hook. Spee. Filic. v. 137, Te. 
Pl. t. 935, Filic. Exot. t. 5; Hook. and Grev. Te. Filie. t. 90; ; Kunze i in 
Pi. Preiss. ii. 110; Hook. i Fl. "iem ii ii. 151; Gym nogramme Pozoi 
ami ; Hook. and Bak. Syn. Filic. 379; Gymnogramme subglandulosa, 
Hook. and Grev. Ie. Filic. t. 91; Gymnogramme papaverifolia, Kunze 
Bail. Queensl. Ferns, 34. 
Queensland. Port Denison, T aeih; Dalrymple Creek, Hartman; Spring- 
sure, Wuth ; Maranoa Com Mitchel 
N. ales. Port Ja cii ‘and Blue Mountains, Woolls and others ; 
Liverpool Plains, 4. Cei, C. Moore; New England, C. Stuart; Goyinga 
a Victorian Expedi 
ctoria. Melbourn e, Adamson , Robertson ; ie oii Sullivan; Broken and 
Heinea Rivers, F. Mu eller ; Gipps ' Land, Walt 
cmn erwent River, R. Brown, vitii in shaded dry stony places, 
J. D. H 
S. me dio. Lofty Range, F. Mueller; Gawler Range, Sullivan ; Central 
Australia, Gosse, Giles. 
a, Drummond, n. 1000; York District, Preiss, n. 1303; Meses 
Range, F. Audi»: between Esperance Bay and Frasers Range, Dempster 
Also in South Western Europe, Chili and New Zealand. 
4. G. leptophylla, Swartz, Filic. 218, t. Re f. 6.—Fronds tufted, 
delicate, under 6 in. high and often only 2 in., the outer ones short, 
with few broadly obovate or fan-shaped agree often barren, the 
others erect with a slender black rhachis, twice pinnate; segmen 
numerous, oblong or cuneate, 2 to 3 lines lon ng, more or less deeply 
lobed, with sed a single oblong sorus on each lobe, often covering 
the whole surface—F. Muell Fragm. v. 137; Gymnogramme lepto- 
phylla, Desv. ; Hook Spec. Filie. v. 136, Brit. Ferns, £i Syn. Filie. 383 ; 
Hook. and Grey. dt Filic. t. 25; Hook. f. Fl. Tasm. ii. 151; Be dd. 
Ferns S. Ind. 
N. S. Wales. Port Stephen, King. 
Victoria. Yarra and Sunt, Rivers and neighbourhood, F. Mueller, Robertson 
and others. 
ar ee Spring Bay near the Tamar, Gunn. 
S. Australia. po ug ehr. 
ssa Range, 
W. Australia, Diii, n. 360, 996. 
ld, 
Widely dispersed over the oe and subtropical regions of the Old Wor 
and also in the Andes of South Ameri 
5. G. pinnata, F. Muell. Fragm. vi. 124, —Rhizome shortly A: : 
ing. ndr i l to 2 ft. high, simply pinnate, glabrous. Pinne 3 to 
ll or reduced tothe single terminal one, lanceolate, 4 to 10 in. long, 
minent midrib and rhachis smooth an shining. Veins diverging 
rom the midrib decens and anastomosing. Sori linear or narrow- 
Pon , very unequal and irregularly she REGS mnogramme pn- 
Hook. Spee, "Pilie. v. 151, Syn. Filic. s ilusion elongata, 
