cklond ay 
rom the pee 
esemble thoy 
of stem; fa 
Campbell’s Islands.) CRYPTOGAMIA ANTARCTICA. 41 
27. JUNGERMANNIA vertebralis —Scapania? vertebralis, Gottsche, Lind. et Nees, Synops. Hepat. 
p. 72. 
Haz. Lord Auckland’s group; on trees, very rare. 
Our specimens of this beautiful species are smaller, but otherwise they coincide with those of Tasmania. It is 
very closely allied to the J. chloroleuca, nobis, from Cape Horn, and also to the J. densifolia, Hook. 
(7. GYMNANTHE, Tayl., subgenus novum.) 
Receptaculum commune terminale, descendens, obconicum. Calyx nullus. Capsula quadrivalvis, seta suffulta. 
Elateres spirales seminibus immixti. Anthere in foliorum axillis libere, pedicellatee.—Stirps ewstipulata ; pericheetia 
majora ; folia caulina infima minima. "Tayl. MSS. 
28. JUNGERMANNIA saccata, Hook.; Musc. Exot. t. xvi. J. tenella, nobis in Lond. Journ. of Botany, 
vol. iii. p. 377, 560 and 579. 
Has. Lord Auckland’s group ; in the woods, abundant. 
The figure of this plant, in the * Musci Exotici,' does not well accord with our species, in which the upper mar- 
gin of the leaf is more produced into a lobe, the apex blunter and sometimes emarginate or even bilobed, the lower 
margin more recurved and the whole base broader. 
To this group may be added the Jungermannia (Acrobolbus, Gottsche) Wilsoni, Nees, and the following. 
29. JUNGERMANNIA Urvilleana.—Scapania Urvilleana, Mont. in Voy. au Pole Sud, Bot. Crypt. t. 16. 
f. 2. et in Ann. Sc. Nat. 1843. p.247. Gottsche, Lind. et Lehm. Syn. Hepat. p. 68. 
Has. Lord Auckland’s group; mixed with other Hepatice in the woods. 
This species, rather variable in its form, especially of the margins of its leaves, is a native of Tasmania, as well 
as of Lord Auckland’s group and the Straits of Magalhaens, where it was first detected by D'Urville. 
(8. LOPHOCOLEA, Nees.) 
30. JUNGERMANNIA bispinosa, Hook. fil. et Tayl.; caulibus procumbentibus implexis subramosis, foliis 
laxe imbricatis secundis erecto-patentibus oblongo-ovatis v. quadratis obtuse emarginatis bifidisve segmentis 
divaricatis acuminatis basi lata decurrente, stipulis minimis bipartitis segmentis subulatis integerrimis v. 
utrinque subdentatis. (Tas. LXIV. Fig. VIL.) 
Haz. Campbell’s Island; on moist ground and trunks of trees in the woods. 
Cespites implexi, 2-3 unc. lati, pallide straminei. Caules prostrati subflexuosi, graciles. Folia secunda, re- 
mota, bifida; stipulis bifidis, rarius multifidis. 
Very nearly allied to the J. bidentata, L., differing in its smaller size, more remote and suberect leaves, which 
are narrower, their cellules more minute, their emargination deeper, and in the stipules being less and generally not 
so compound. 
Prare LXIV. Fig. VII.—1, a specimen of the natural size; 2, portion of the stem, magnified. 
31. JUNGERMANNIA lenta; Hook. fil. et Tayl.; caulibus elongatis cespitosis subsimplicibus flexuosis 
L 
