TORTULACE^.] 185 [Ephemerum. 



4. EPHEMERUM COHJERENS (Hedw.} Hampe. 



Dioicous ; leaves oblongo-lanceolate, serrulate, nerved to apex. Caps. 

 globose, brown-purple. (T. XXVII, D.) 



SYN. Phascnm coharens HEDW. Sp. muse. 25, t. i, f. i 6 (1801). BRID. Sp. muse. I, 4(1806), 

 Mant. 6 (1819), Bry. univ. i, 29 (1826). SCHWAEG. Suppl. I, P. I, p. 4 (1811). LA PYL. 

 Journ. hot. 1813, p. 280, t. 19, f. 10. BR. SCHIMP. Bry. eur. fasc. i, p. 6, t. i (1837). 



Phase, heterophyllum DE NOT. Muse. ital. spic. 23 (1837) 5 Syllab. 313 (1838). 



Ephemerum cohcercns HAMPE Flora 1837, P- 28 5- RABENH. Deutsch kr. fl. ii, s. 3, 84 (1848). 

 C. MUELL. Bot. zeit., 1847, p. 101. Synops. 1,32 (1849). BR. SCHIMP. Bry. eur. fasc. 

 42, t. i (1849). SCHIMP. Synops. 5 (1860), 2 ed. 4 (1876). DE NOT. Epil. bri. ital. 742 

 (1869). MILDE Bry. siles. 189 (1869). JAEG. Ber. St. Gall, gesells. 1869, p. 100. 

 JURATZ. Laubm. oester.-ung. 5 (1882). LESQ. JAMES Mosses N. Amer. 39 (1884). 



Dioicous ; resembling E. serratum, protonema paler, less dense, 

 becoming reddish-brown by age. Lower leaves lanceolate, upper erect, 

 oblongo-lanc. denticulate toward apex with projecting cells ; nerve soft, 

 vanishing at or below apex, cells at base hexagono-rectangular, above 

 hexagono -rhomboid. Caps, subglobose with a short point, brown, less 

 solid ; spores rough, brown. 

 HAB. Moist banks ; very rare. Fr. n 2. 



By the side of the River Shannon, near Portumna, Galway (Moore, 

 1865) ! ! 



The Irish plant quite accords with the American in its erecto-patent 

 leaves with slightly recurved points, and short upper cells, but the specimens 

 are poor and stunted, and only half the size of the foreign ones. 



5. EPHEMERUM STENOPHYLLUM (Voit) Schimp. 



Autoicous ; leaves lane. -subulate, nerve thick, excurrent. Caps, 

 small, subspherical with a short point. (T. XXVII, E.) 



SYN. Phascnm stenophylliim VOIT in STURM Deutsch. fl. II, fasc. 14 (1813). FUNCK Moost. 2, 

 t. i (1821). NEES HORNSCH. Bry. germ, i, 39, t. 4, f. 2 (1823). BRID. Bry. univ. i, 

 30(1826). DE NOT. Syll. muse. 312 (1838). WILS. in Eng. Bot. t. 2829. HUEBEN. 

 Muse. germ. 3 (1833). 



Phascum sessile BR. SCHIMP. Bry. eur. fasc. i. (1837). SCHIMP. in Pollichia ii,4g (1844), et 

 in Flora 1845. WILS. Bry. brit. 27, t. 37 (1855). HOBK. Syn. br. m. 27 (1873). 



Phascum crassincrvium (baud SCHWAEG.) BR. SCH. Bry. eur. fasc. i, p. 7, t. 2 (1837). 



Ephemerum crassinervium HAMPE in Flora 1837, P- 2 &5- C. MUELL. in Bot. Zeit. 1847, 

 p. 101. 



Ephcm. sessile RABENH. Deutsch. kr. fl. ii, S. 3, 85 (1848). C. MUELL. Synops. i, 33 (1849). 



BR. SCH. Bry. eur. fasc. 42, p. 5, t. 2 (1849). BERK. Handb. br. m. 304 (1863). 

 Ephcm. stenophylliim SCHIMP. Synops. 5 (1860), 2 ed. 6 (1876). DE NOT. Epil. bri. ital. 



743 (1869). MILDE Bry. siles. 189 (1869). JAEG. Ber. St. Gall, gesells. 1869, p. 101. 



JURATZ. Laubm. oester.-ung. 5 (1882). LESQ. JAMES Mosses n. Amer. 39 (1884). 



Autoicous ; rather taller than E. serratum, with green protonema. 

 Lower leaves minute, lane, nerveless, upper much longer, erect, rather 

 rigid, lanceolate-subulate ; margin more or less serrulate at apex, nerve 

 pale and indistinct at base, thence stout, deep green and excurrent ; 

 cells at base elongated rectangular, above shorter, narrower and more 

 incrassate. Caps, subspherical or ovate with a short point, rufescent ; 



