ix] " GILL-TUFTS " OF OENONE 119 



of the water exposes them to entire or partial desiccation, has 

 been repeatedly noted by travellers. Barrington Brown] 1 ,' in 

 describing his explorations up the Cuyuni River in British 



FIG. 81. Oenone mvltibranchiata, Matthiesen. Part of flowering plant showing the 

 numerous "gill-tufts" on the upper surfaces of the leaves. [Matthiesen, F. (1908).] 



Guiana, mentions the occurrence of Podostemaceae on the 



rocks under water where the current runs strongest, and adds, 



1 Brown, C. Barrington (1876). 



