436 KHIZOCAKPE.E. (PEPPERWORT FAMILY.) 



1. S. rupestris, Spring. Stems prostrate or ascending, rather rigid, 

 2 to 12 inches long, vaguely or subpinnately branching: leaves glaucescent, 

 closely imbricated and appressed, lanceolate, scarcely a line long, convex and 

 grooved on the back, bristle-tipped and ciliate : spikes strongly quadrangular : 

 macrosporangia abundant, intermixed with the slightly smaller and more 

 numerous microsporangia. On dry rocks, especially in the mountains. 



SUBCLASS II. ISOSPOEE^. 

 Producing but one kind of spore. Leaves without ligules. 



ORDER 93. L,yCGPODIACE^E. (CLus-Moss FAMILY.) 



Moss-like plants, with small leaves imhricated in 4 to many rows 

 on the pinnately or dichotornously branching steins, and (in ours) with 

 reniform 1 -celled sporangia in the axils of bracts formiug stalked or 

 sessile spikes. 



1. LY CO PODIUM, L., Spring. CLUB-MOSS. GROUND-PINE. 



Characters those of the order. In ours the leaves (bracts) of the spike are 

 yellowish, ovate or heart-shaped, very different from the other leaves. 



1 . L. annotinum, L. Stems prostrate and creeping, 1 to 4 feet long ; 

 the ascending branches similar, dichotomous, 4 to 6 inches high : leaves in 

 several ranks, equal, spreading, rigid, lanceolate, pointed, serrulate, 2 to 

 4 lines long : spikes solitary at the ends of leafy branches. From Colorado 

 to Washington Territory, eastward and northward across the continent. 



CLASS II FILICIN^E. 



Plants with a solid stem, which (in ours) is horizontal 

 and usually underground, bearing broadly expanded mostly 

 long-petioled leaves (fronds), with prominent midrib and 

 veins. Prothallus monoecious. 



ORDER 94. KH1ZOCABPEJE. (PEPPERWORT FAMILY.) 



Aquatic plants, with a horizontal stern floating upon the water or 

 running through the mud at the bottom of shallow water : leaves eir- 

 cinately developed, simple or quadrifid: spores of two kinds: the fruits 

 (conceptacles) borne on peduncles (in fact petioles), or sessile beneath 

 the stem. 



