BY W. A. WEYMOUTH. 205 
apex, not glossy; areolation firm, narrow, elongated; peri- 
chaetial bracts more shortly sheathing. Capsule on a purple 
seta, cernuous, ovate-oblong with scarce any neck, not striate, 
exannulate; lid conic, obliquely rostrate, large, purple; peri- 
stome purple. Male plant small, simple.—Dr. Braithwaite’s 
British Moss-Flora, Vol. 1., pp. 118-4, T. xvi. EH. 
On rocks, New Town Falls, 1889, and St. Crispin’s, Mount 
Wellington, 1890, W. A. Weymouth, Nos. 123 and 519. 
2. Blindia robusta, Hampe in Linnea 1860, 627. 
On top of Mount Wellington, 1890, W. A. Weymouth, 
Nos. 481 and 491. 
(Also Australian Alps, Victoria, F’. v. M., and N.S. Wales 
and New Zealand.) 
3. Dicranum polysetum, Hampe. 
At Buckland, 1887, W. Turvey (W. A. W. No. 454). Guy 
Fawkes Rivulet, Russell Falls, and Mount Wellington, W. 
A. Weymouth, Nos. 455, 456, and 464. 
4. Apalodium lineare (Tayl.), Mitt. 
On damp bank, Beaconsfield, 1892, W. A. Weymouth, No. 
1138. 
5. Campylopus pudicus, Hornsch, 
Densely tufted, but only loosely cohering, with a dark- 
colourec tomentum, ascending, rather rigid, flexuose, rather 
naked below, subcomose above, interruptedly innovate with 
filiform, solitary, sub-cuspidate shoots springing out below 
the perigonium. Stem leaves lanceolate, canaliculate, narrow, 
produced into a more or less reflexed denticulate hyaline hair- 
point, above with connivent convolute margins, sparingly 
rough on the back, almost without cells atthe wings; nerve 
broad, elamellate, base elongate, pellucid, thin, areolation above 
minutely elliptical. External perichaetial leaves similar to 
the canline; internal more or less acuminate, rather broad, 
slightly denticulate, nerve thin; the innermost broadly con- 
volute, short, coloured, areolation lax, nerve obsolete. Male 
flower formed of several narrow gemme.—C. Mill. Syn 
Muse. I., p. 407. 
Peppermint Bay, 1889, and Guy Fawkes Rivulet, 1890, 
W. A. Weymouth, Nos. 865 and 296. 
(Also found in New South Wales and Queensland.) 
6. Campylopus Tasmanicus, Schimp, 
Peppermint Bay, 1889, McRobie’s Gully, and Guy Fawkes 
Rivulet, 1896, W. A. Weymouth, Nos. 248, 274, and 907. 
(Also the Grampians, Victoria, D, Sullivan.) 
[Since this paper was read Dr, Brotherus writes :—* Campy- 
lopus tasmanicus, Schimp., has not yet been described, The 
