Falklands, etc.) CRYPTOGAMIA ANTARCTICA. 179 
30. IRIDJEA, Bory. 
1. Irınza Radula, Bory; Fl. Antarct. Pt. 1. p. 188. 
Haz. Hermite Island, Cape Horn; Falkland Islands and Kerguelen's Land, very abundant. Cock- 
burn Island ; at the limits of southern vegetation, on the beach, rare and bleached. 
So abundant are the Zridee in the South Polar Ocean, and so variable in their form and texture, that we can 
‘scarcely hope to arrive at any accurate knowledge of the species until they shall have been studied in a living state ; 
and then it is not improbable that the genus will be considerably reduced; and one or two of the more common 
species be found to assume forms as dissimilar as those of our Laurencia pinnatifida. 
There exist in the Hookerian Herbarium, authentic specimens of the Fucus bracteatus of Gmelin, as figured 
in Turner’s * Historia,’ collected both at the Cape of Good Hope and in North West America, by Mr. Menzies. 
These are (as is generally the case with the specimens of the larger Fuci, preserved in our Herbaria) smaller and of 
that lanceolate form which other Zridee present in a young state. Their texture is very thick, densely cartila- 
ginous, opaque; and covered with tubercles which fall away, leaving a cribriform frond both when immature and 
older. This great density is a very remarkable character, and observable in the plant here referred to that species, 
which, when full grown, becomes broadly ovate, or orbicular, and cordate or rounded, or narrowed at the base ; 
with the lamina more or less and variously divided, sometimes three feet broad, or upwards. The largest speci- 
mens we have never seen attached, though they are abundant, washed up on the beach, and probably attain their 
great size on the outer rocks. 
Since the publication of the first part of this work, we have, through Dr. Montagne’s kindness, had the oppor- 
tunity of inspecting the Z. laminarivides, Bory, of Lord Auckland's Group: specimens of which are in our Herbarium 
from the same island; but which we had previously regarded as a more delicate state of 7. Radula. Even what we 
consider the true I. Radula of Lord Auckland’s Group and Kerguelen's Land, is not so dense in the frond as the 
specimens of the Falkland Islands and Cape of Good Hope are. Both this and the following species have the 
surface frequently covered with granules, tubercles or pedicellate pear-shaped organs; or in the young state with 
elongated fleshy bodies similar to those of the J. stiriata, Bory. The I. stiriata, according to the descriptions, may 
belong to a state of this, or the following, or many other forms of the genus: it is, however, a narrower, smaller 
species, with a much more dense frond than even Z. Radula. 
2. Intpma cordata, Bory, in Duperrey Voy. Bot. p.104; et I. micans, p. 110. t. 18 et 13 dis. Haly- 
menia cordata, Agardh, Sp. Alg. p. 201. Fucus cordatus, Turner Hist. Fuc. t. 116. ; 
Var. B. ciliolata ; stipite brevi cartilagineo cuneato ciliato-dentato mox in frondem simplicem ovato- 
lanceolatam desinente, fronde latissima basi cuneata v. cordata apice obtusa v. acuta v. emarginato-bifida 
membranacea rubra plana nitente levi margine vix undulata. Nobis i Lond. Journ. Bot. vol. iv. p. 263. 
Var. y. dichotoma; stipite brevi mox cuneato furcato v. pluries dichotomo sensim in frondem late 
cuneatam obovatamve desinente, segmentis integris vel divisis margine dentatis lobatis proliferisve. 
Has. Hermite Island, Cape Horn, and the Falkland Islands; both varieties very abundant. 
This species, when fresh, well deserves the brilliant description of its beautiful tints, given by M. Bory 
on the authority of Admiral D’Urville and M. Gaudichaud. It is one of the most common dige of the 
southern extremity of America and the Falklands. In its younger state, the fronds are obovate or spathulate, like 
those of I. laminarioides, figured by Bory, and soon expand into laminæ, variously modified, according to situa- 
tion and exposure, with relation to the force of the sea, the nature of the bottom, the currents, depth, and protection 
afforded by other Alge ; for no two fronds of a similar shape are usually to be found within a few yards. Indeed, 
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