4yt> FERN FAMILY. 



lower pair turned obliquely forwards ; secondary divisions crowded, ob- 

 long, obtuse, entire ; fruit dots all near the margin. 



P. hezagon6ptera, F6e. Common N. and S. ; larger than the last, 

 which it much resembles, but the frond is broader than long ; lowest 

 pinnae mucli the largest and with elongated and pinnatifid divisions ; fruit 

 dots not exclusively near the margin. 



» * Fronds icith three primary divisions, whicli are stalked; rhachis wing- 

 less. 



P. Dry6pteria, F6e. Common N. ; fronds broadly triangular, 4'-6' 

 wide, smooth ; the three primary divisions triangular, once or twice pin- 

 nate with oblong, obtuse, entire, or toothed lobes ; fruit dots neax the 

 margin. 



16. ASPIDIUM, SHIELD FERN. (Greek for a little shield, refer- 

 ring to the indusium.) A very large genus, inhabiting all parts of the 



• world. (Lessons, Figs. 502-504.) 



§ 1. Nephr6dium or Drtopteris. Indusium round-kidney-shaped or 

 nearly circular, with a narrow cleft from the lower side almost to the 

 center. 



* Fronds thin, decaying in early autumn (or tender hot house plants), 

 pinnate ; pinnoi simply pinnatifid, with mostly entire, obtuse lobes; in- 

 dusium small. 



■*- Bootstock creeping, slender, nearly naked, and bearing scattered fronds ; 

 veins free, simple, or once forked ; common in bogs and low grounds. 



A. Thelypteris, Swartz. Fronds lanceolate, 10'-18' long, on slender 

 stalks, nearly smooth ; pinnae lanceolate, 2'^' long, about ^' wide, 

 spreading or turned down, the lowest pair scarcely shorter; divisions ob- 

 long, fruiting ones seeming acute from the revolute margins ; veins mostly 

 forked ; fruit dots confluent when ripe ; indusium smooth ; N. and S. 



A. Noveborac^nse, Swartz. Much like the last, but hairy beneath 

 along the rhachis and veins ; fronds tapering both ways from the middle ; 

 lower pinnse gradually smaller and distant ; lobes tlat, the basal ones 

 often larger and incised ; veins rarely forked ; fruit dots distinct ; indu- 

 sium slightly glandular. N. Car. , N. and W. ; common N. 



4- -I- Bootstock oblique or erect, stouter, bearing the fronds in a crown ; 

 veins simple, free, or the lower ones of contiguous lobes united; indu- 

 sium hairy. 



A. p4tens, Swartz. Low, shady grounds, Fla. and W. ; fronds l°-2° 

 high, sparsely pubescent, ovate-oblong ; pinnae 3'-G' long, ^' wide, numer- 

 ous, lanceolate from a broad base, lowest pairs a little smaller ; divisions 

 oblong, slightly falcate, obtuse, or acutish ; veins entirely free ; indusium 

 slightly hairy. 



# * Fronds smooth, from once to thrice pinnate, growing in a crown from 

 a stout and chaffy rootstock, and often remaining green through the 

 tointer; veins l-A-forked or branching. Wild species of the country. 



■t- Fronds imperfectly evergreen, once-pinnate with deeply pinnatifid 

 pinnce, or nearly twice pinnate; fruit dots not close to the margin; in- 

 dusium rather large, flat, smooth, persistent. 



A. Goldi^um, Hook. Rich, moist woods. Conn., to Ky., and N. ; 

 fronds broadly ovate, 2°-4° high, 9'-12' wide ; pinnae oblong-lanceolate, 

 broadest about the middle, parted to the midrib ; divisions very numer- 

 ous, nearly 1' long, somewhat scythe-shaped, rather acute, serrate with 

 incurved teeth ; fruit dots very near the midvein. 



