MACOUN.] CATALOGUE OF CANADIAN PLANTS. 85 



the leaves long, attenuate to the subulate apex, distinctly papillose, the 

 costa narrower, rough at back. 



This species differs from the preceding species in the curved pedicel 

 of the capsule ; it has not hitherto been found fruiting in Europe. 

 The allied Ulota phyllantha has the leaves nearly sublinear above the 

 middle, short-acuminate and obtuse, faintly papillose, the costa smooth 

 at back, the capsule longer with a long collum and a long, fine and 

 straight pedicel ; it grows, probably, always on trees ; U. maritima is 

 only found on rocks near the sea ; also in Sweden, &c. 



On rocks surrounded by the tide at Hastings, B.C. ; also on rocks 

 close to the sea at Vesuvius Bay, Salt Spring Island, Gulf of Georgia, 

 May 9th. 1887; and at Comox, Vancouver Island, April 30th, 1887. 

 (Macoun) On rocks, Texada Island, B.C. 1885. (Dawson.) Ounalaska 

 Island, Behring Sea and Kadiak, Island, Alaska. 1891. (J. M. 

 Macoun.') Miquelon Island. (Deldmare.') 



(323.) U. camptopoda, Kindb. (n.sp.); Canadian Musci, No. 582. 



Stem not creeping. Leaves, when dry, crisped, when moist patent 

 or squarrose, often curved, faintly papillose, from a short dilated 

 ventricose base, suddenly narrowed into the acute or subulate acumen, 

 borders recurved at the base, and also often above on one side ; outer 

 basal cells, disposed in 2-5 rows, quadrate-rectangular thick-walled, 

 inner narrow, orange, upper rotundate ; costa elevate, stout percurrent. 

 Capsule small, long-necked, when dry faintly plicate, narrow, sub- 

 cylindric and not constricted below the mouth, obovate when moist ; 

 teeth bigerminate, pale, when dry recurved ; cilia none ; lid long- 

 apiculate ; pedicel long, but not much emergent, flexible, more or less 

 curved or geniculate, in younger as well as in the dry state ; calyptra 

 densely hairy, covering the capsule. 



Habit of U. crispula. Agrees with U. maritimain the curved pedicel ; 

 differs from U. Ludwigii in the narrower capsule. Growing together 

 with U. Ludwigii on trees along the creek north of the tollgate on the 

 Aylmer Eoad near Hull ; also on the pales on the south west corner 

 of the cemetery west of Hull on the Aylmer road, Que. 189 1. (Macoun.) 



(324.) U. Barclay i, Mitt. ; Lesq. & James, Mosses of N. America, 

 164 ; Mitt. Journ. Linn. Soc. Till., 26. 



Sitka. (Barclay.) 



(325.) U. connectens, Kindb. (n. sp.) ; Canadian Musci, No. 557. 

 Orthotrichum connectens, Kindb. Ott. Nat. IV, 64. 



Mono3cious. Tufts soft, pulvinate, green above, blackish below. 

 Stems erect. Leaves from an ovate concave base linear-lanceolate, 



