POLYPODIACEAE (FERN FAMILY) V6 



veins pinnately forking, the lowest anterior veinlets bearing the fruit clots near 

 the midvein ; indusiuni orbicular with a shallow sinus, smooth and naked. 

 {Dryopteris cristata^ var. Underw. ) — Swampy woods, N. H. to N. C, and westw. 

 to Wise. July. — Kootstock stout, creeping, chaffy (like the stipes) with large 

 bright-brown scales. Appears to hybridize with A. marginale^ as does also the 

 typical form of the species. 



10. A. spinul5sum (O. F. ?*Iuller) Sw. Stipes with a few pale-broion decidiiona 

 scales; frond ovate-lanceolate, twice pinnate; pinnae oblique to the rhachis, 

 elongated-triangular^ the lower pairs broadly triangular ; pinnules set obliquely 

 on the midribs, connected by a very narrow wing, oblong, acute, incisely serrate 

 or pinnatifid with spinulose-toothed lobes ; indusium smooth and ivithout mar- 

 ginal glands. {Nephrodium Strempel ; Dryo'ptens Kuntze.) — Rich woods, 

 Nfd. to Ya., Ky., and north westw. (Greenl., Eu.) A, pittsforl»ense (^Slos- 

 son) Eastman, a supposed hybrid with A. marginale, occurs in Vt. and on Staten 

 I.. N. Y. 



Var. intermedium (Muhl.) D. C. Eaton. Scales of the stipe few, brown with 

 a darker center ; frond broadly oblong-ovate, tripinnatifid ; pinnae spreading, 

 oblong-lanceolate, the lower unequally triangular-ovate ; pinnules crowded, 

 ovate-oblong, spreading, pinnately cleft; the oblong lobes spinulose-toothed at 

 the apex; margin of the indusium denticulate and beset with minute stalked 

 glands. {Xephrodium spimdosum, var. Davenp. ; Dryopteris spinulosa., var. 

 Underw.) — Woods, common. 



Var. dilatatum (Hoffm.) Hook. Scales of the stipe large, broi'jn loith a dark 

 center ; frond broader, ovate or triangular-ovate in outline, tripinnatifid; phi- 

 nules lance-oblong, the lowest often much elongated ; indusium glandulir- 

 ciliolate. {Nephrodium spinulosum, var. fructuosum Gilbert). — N. S. to Va., 

 and N. Y. (Eu.) Forma anadexifm I^obinson is in all respects like var. dila- 

 tatum, but with the indusium destitute of glands (the var. dilatatum of Am. 

 auth. chiefly, not Hook.) — Common, chiefly in rocky upland woods. (Asia.) 



Var. concordianum (Davenp.) Eastman, Fronds tripinnate ; pinnules (of 

 the 3d order) small (4 mm. long), elliptical, spinulose-denticulate ; indusium 

 glandular-puberulent. — Concord, Mass. {Purdie). 



15. CYSTOPTERIS Bernh. Bladder Ferx 



Fruit dots roundish, borne on the back of a straight fork of the free veins ; 

 the delicate indusium hood-like or arched, attached by a broad base on the inner 

 side (toward the midrib) parUy under the fruit dot, early opening free at the 

 other side, which looks toward the apex of the lobe, and is somewhat jagged, 

 soon thrown back or withering away. — Delicate ferns with 2-3-pinnate fronds ; 

 the lobes cut-toothed. (Name composed of Kvans, a bladdery and Trrepis, fern, 

 from the inflated indusium.) 



1. C. bulbifera (L.) Bernh. Frond lanceolate, elongated, attenuate (3-6 

 dm. long), 2-pinnate ; the pinnae lanceolate-oblong, pointed, horizontal; the 

 rhachis and ptinnae often bearing bulblets underneath, wingless; pinnules 

 crowded, oblong, obtuse, toothed or pinnatifid ; indusium short, truncate on 

 the free side. {Filix Underw.) — Shaded ravines, chiefly on calcareous rocks. 

 July. 



2. C. fragilis (L.) Bernh. Frond oblong -lanceolate (1-3 dm. long, besides 

 the brittle stalk which is fully as long), 2-3-pinnate; the pinnae and pinnules 

 ovate or lanceolate in outline, irregularly pinnatifid or ciU-toothed, mostly 

 acute, decurrent on the margined or icinged rhachis; indusium tapering or 

 acute at the free end, (Filix Underw.) — Shaded cliffs, rocky woods, etc.; 

 common and varying greatly in the shape and cutting of the pinnules. July. 

 (Cosmop.) 



16. W06dSIA R. Br. 



Fruit dots round, borne on the back of simply forked free veins ; the very thin 

 and often evanescent indusium attached by its base all anmnd tlie receptacle, 

 under the sporangia, either small and open, or else early bur.siing at the top into 



