56 HANDBOOK OF BRITISH HEPATIC^. 



closely imbricating, smaller, ovate, ventricose, with 

 lobule ovate, almost equal to superior lobe, forming 

 a deep pouch, cells small, hexagonal ; perianth 

 compressed, obconical, with a gradually tapering 

 base, mouth entire. Capsule oblong-oval. Elaters 

 bispiral, curved, lax. 



Radula Carringrtonii, Jack. 



Dioicous. Stems caespitose, prostrate, sub- 

 pinnately branched ; leaves imbricate, spread- 

 ing, entire, superior lobe rounded, subreniform, 

 inferior four times smaller, quadrate, adpressed. 



Radula aquilegia var. major, Carr. Trans. 

 Ed. VII., p. 455. Radula Carringtonii, Jack. 

 Journ. Bot. XX., 1882 ; Revue Bryol., 1882, 

 p. 1 6. 



On shady rocks and trees. (Plate i, fig. 75.) 



This species grows in close patches of an olive 

 green, or brown colour. The stems are from 4 to 5 

 centimetres long, irregularly pinnate, with somewhat 

 ascending branches. The leaves imbricate one 

 another, and are almost flat, margin entire, the 

 superior lobe stands off obliquely from the stem, 

 is rotundate, almost reniform. The lobule reaches 

 hardly to half the length and breadth of the 

 superior lobe, with which it forms a sharp angle, 

 and upon which it lies flat. The same is quadrate, 

 or more or less trapeziform. The female involucral 

 leaves are oblong-oval, with oval rotundate lobules 

 two-thirds as large. Archegonia seven to eight. 



From R. complanata^ which it resembles in size 

 and form ; it is at once distinguished by the dull, pale 



