40 



T^JANDl'.OOK OK nRITISH HP:PATICi«. 



Taylor Gott. Syn. p. 376; Spruce Hep. Pyr. 

 Trans. Bot. Soc. Edin. III., 212; Carr. and 

 Pears. Exs. No. 52; Cooke Hep. fig. 154. 



On damp rocks. 



var. pumila, Carr. and Pears. Exs. No. 279. 



Stems creeping, branched. Leaves vertical, im- 

 bricate, ovate, alternate, auriculate 

 beneath, larger lobe plane ovate, 

 (acute in Dickson's figure) lobule 

 saccate and inflexed, often radicu- 

 lose. Fruit terminal or lateral. 

 Calyx obovate, acutely five-angled 

 at the apex, mouth lacerated {plate 

 3°' ^j fiS- ^\ The figure 30 is a fac- 



simile of Dickson's fiG:ure. 



Lejeunia serpyllifolia, Dicks., Lib. 



Stems vaguely branched, lax, leaves in- 

 current, accumbent, auriculate, larger limb 

 plane, rounded-oblong ; stipules rounded, 

 bifid, involucral deeply and unequally two- 

 lobed, entire ; perianth broadly ovate, penta- 

 gonal, mouth mucronate. 



Jiingcnnajuiia serpyllifolia, Dicks. Cr3'pt. 4, 

 p. 19; Hook. Br. Jung. t. 42 ; Eng. Bot. t. 

 2537. Lrjciinia serpyllifolia, Lib. Ann. VL, 



