104 BROOKLYN BOTANIC GARDEN MEMOIRS 



Bryum Cruegeri Hampe. Bed of stream, Tutu, St. Thomas. 

 Sterile. 



Philonotis sphaerocarpa (Sw.) Bridel. [Mnium sphaericarpum 

 Sw.] Moist banks, high hills of St. Thomas. 



Philonotis tenella (C. Muell.) Jaeger. [Bartramia tenella C. 

 Muell.] Wet banks, St. Jan. 



Pireella cymbifolia (Sull.) Cardot. [Pilotrichum cymbifolium 

 Sull.] On trees near Bethania, St. Jan. 



Neckera disticha (Sw.) Hedw. [Fontinalis disticha Sw.] On 

 trees, rarely on rocks, St. Peter, St. Thomas. 



Neckera jamaicensis (Gmel.) E. G. Britton. [Hypnum jamai- 

 cense Gmel.] On trees, Bethania, St. Jan. 



Callicostella Belangeriana (Besch.) Jaeger. [Hookeria Bel- 

 angeriana Besch.] On stones, Bordeaux, St. Jan. 



Stereophyllum leucostegum (Bridel) Mitten. [Leskea leuco- 

 stega Bridel.] On wet or shaded rocks, St. Thomas; St. Jan. 



MiTTENOTHAMNiuM DiMiNUTivuM (Hampe) E. G. Britton. [Hyp- 

 num diminutivum Hampe.] On old wood, Bordeaux, St. Jan. 



Taxithelium planum (Bridel) Mitten. [Hypnum planum Bridel.] 

 Wet rocks, logs and tree-roots, St. Thomas; St. Jan. 



Sematophyllum admistum (Sull.) Mitten. [Hypnum admistum 

 Sull.] Shaded banks, stones and dead wood, St. Thomas; St. Jan. 



Haplocladium microphyllum (Sw.) Broth. [Hypnum micro- 

 phyllum Sw.] Shaded bank between Pearl and Bonne Resolution, 

 St. Thomas. 



Thuidium cymbifolium (Dz. & Mk.) Br. Jav. Shaded banks, St. 

 Thomas. 



Dendropogon rufescens Schimp., a Mexican species, has been 

 credited to St. Thomas in Paris, Index, and accepted by Brotherus, 

 but we have seen no specimens. 



HEPATICAE OF ST. CROIX, ST. JAN, ST. THOMAS AND 



TORTOLA^ 



In the Synopsis Hepaticarum of Gottsche, Lindenberg and Nees 

 von Esenbeck, published in 1844-47, three species of Hepaticae are 

 listed from St. Croix, one from St. Jan, and one from St. Thomas. 

 Another species, although listed from St. Kitts, was based in all prob- 

 ability on material from St. Jan. A seventh species has been listed 

 from St. Jan by Stephani. These seven species, which are the only 

 ones so far reported from the islands under discussion, deserve a few 

 words of comment. 



^ Contributed by Alexander W. Evans, Yale University. 



