POLYPODIACEAE. 467 



1. Pteris caudata L. Sp. PI. 1075. 1753. 



Fteridium caudatum Maxon, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. 23: 631. 1901. 



Pteris aqiiilina caudata Hook. Sp. Fil. 2: 196. 1858. 



Leaves erect, 1-2 m. tall; blades triangular in outline, 2-4-pinnate; 

 divisions pinnatifid, the ultimate segments narrow, with recurved margins, re- 

 mote from one another, scarcely decurrent on the rachis except near the apex, 

 the larger with 1-12 similar but shorter segments. 



Pine-lands, scrub-lands and coppices, Abaco, Great Bahama, Andros, New Provi- 

 dence, Cat Island, Crooked Island. North Caicos : — Florida ; Bermuda ; Jamaica ; 

 Cuba : Hispaniola ; Porto Rico ; Montserrat ; continental tropical America. South- 

 ern Bracken. 



5. PYCNODORIA Presl. Epim. 101. 1849. 



Mostly large ferns, the petioles not jointed with the rootstocks, the leaves 

 variously divided. Sori marginal, continuous or nearly so, on a filiform or 

 narrow receptacle connecting the tips of the free veins; indusium simple, 

 membranous, formed by the reflexed margin of the leaf. Sporanges pedicelled, 

 provided with a vertical ring which bursts transversely. [Greek, thick-skinned.] 

 Many species, of warm and tropical regions. Type species: Pteris opaca 

 J. Smith. 



1. Pycnodoria longifolia (L.) Britton, Fl. Berm. 418. 1918. 



Pteris longifolia L. Sp. PI. 1074. 1753. 



Leaves somewhat spreading; petioles 1.5-3 dm. long, clothed below with 

 pale brown scales; blades simply pinnate, oblong-lanceolate, 3-6 dm. long; 

 pinnae linear, 4-8 mm. wide, entire, sessile; veins close, usually once branched; 

 indusium yellowish brown. 



In sink-holes. Great Bahama, Andros. New Providence : — Florida : Bermuda ; 

 Jamaica : Cuba ; Hispaniola ; Porto Rico ; St. Thomas ; St. Croix ; St. Kitts ; Guade- 

 loupe ; Dominica : Martinique. 



In a monstrous form from NichoH's Town, Andros, the pinnae are deeply cut 

 into linear lobes 4 cm. long or less. Long-leu4.ved Brake. 



6. ADIANTUM [Tourn.] L. Sp. PI. 1094. 1753. 



Graceful ferns of rocky hillsides, woods, and ravines, with much divided 

 leaves and short marginal sori borne on the under side of the reflexed and 

 altered portion of the pinnule, which serves as an indusium. Stipes and 

 branches of the leaves slender or filiform, often polished and shining. [Name 

 ancient.] A genus of over 175 species, mostly of tropical America. Type 

 species: Adiantum Capillus-V eneris L. 



Leaf-segments stalked, cimeate at base. 1. A. tenennn. 



Leaf-segments sessile, truncate at base. 2. A. melanoleucum._ 



1. Adiantum tenerum Sw. Prodr. 135. 1788. 



Eootstock short, thick. Stipes smooth, nearly black, shining, 1-3 dm. long. 

 Blades 2-4-pinnate, 2-4 dm. long, glabrous; pinnules many, filiform-stalked, 

 subrhombic, membranous, cuneate at the base, dentate or incised above, deli- 

 cately many-veined, jointed with the stalk, 8^25 mm. long; sori few or several, 

 roundish or oblong. 



In caves, sink-holes and on steps, Abaco, Andros. New Providence, Eleuthera : — 

 Florida ; Jamaica ; Cuba to St. Thomas and St. Croix ; St. Kitts to Tobago : conti- 

 nental tropical America. The fern recorded by Coker as Adiantum CapiJlus-Veneris 

 L., is, apparently, this species. Slender Maiden-hair Fern. 



