TUK'llOMANKS. 143 



85. T. sly/fmon, Poir. ; " fronds subtripinnato, piniKc al- 

 ternate, pinnules decurrent, segments solitary, rccejUacles 

 exscrted." — Fotr. Encijcl. Bat. viii. ;>. 32. — Madagascar, Du 

 Petit Til o liars. 



86. T. darallioides, Gand.; " fronds scattered lanceolate 

 bipinnate subtripinnato 1 foot liigli, ])innulcs lanceolate pin- 

 nalilid and cut, segments oblong ol)tuse at tlie ai)ex 2-3-rid, 

 sori oblong axillary subpedicellate, racliis and stipes mar- 

 gined, caudex climbing liairy." Caudich. hi Freijchi. Voij. 

 JBol. p. 378.— Sandwich Islands, Gaudichaud. 



87. T. veuii.stu7n, Desv. ; " fronds everywhere decurrent 

 subtripinnato, segments linear emarginate bifid and obtuse, 

 sori axillary and terminal, receptacles included, stipes short 

 margined, caudex climbing .'' " — Desv. in Mem. Linn. Soc. 

 Par. p. 328, — Brazil, {Desvaux). 



T. undulatum. Wall. Cat. n. 1 GO,— "Mauritius," Wallich. 

 — Quite unknown to me. 



T. compressirm, Desv. "Mag. Nat. Berol. 1811, p. 329." 

 — T have no access to the work just mentioned, and the name 

 only is given by Desvaux, in Mem. Linn. Soc. Par. ii. p. 330. 



T. alc/ie?nil/(vfo/iinn, AVall. Cat. n. 159. Mauritius, Tel- 

 fair. — Probably T. nieifolium or T. acliillecBfoliiim. 



T. cormophyUinn, Kaulf, En, Syn. Fib p, 2G0, and Drege, 

 Herb. Cap. — See under Alsophila Capensis, p, 37). 



T. capillaium, " Taschner Dissertatio de Trichom. Jena, 

 1843," (quoted by Presl, Hymen, p. 65, under Didymo- 

 glossum capillatum, Pr.) 



T, fiahellatum, Bory, in Belanger, Voy. Bot, p, 77, 

 from the Mysore, who considers that it may be the same as 

 T. di(jitatum, Sw, 



T. adiantinum, Bory, in Belanger, Voy, Bot. p, 78 ; 

 " fronds stipitate entire fiabellato-abbreviate, fructiferous at 

 the crenate margin." Mauritius and Bourbon, Belanger. 



T. loreurn^ Bory, in Belanger, Voy. Bot. p. 79, is the 

 same as T. la/iceum, Willd. 



T. radicans, supra, p. 125. 



The name of our friend J. T. Machay Esq. ought assuredly to liave been 

 associated with the discoverers of this interesting plant in Ireland. It was, 

 as I have since learned, in the summer or autumn of ISOt, that Dr. Stokes, 

 accompanied by Miss Filton (not Kelton), detected a single plant without 

 fruit near the Powerscourt waterfall, and sent a specimen to Sir J. E. Smith. 



