Gardneriane. N. O. Filices. 
TAB. CDLXXVII. 
CorropHYLLUM aeusrenjann. Gard. 
Gen. Cuar. Sporangia ovata, vasculoso-reticulata, apice bre- 
viter radiatim striata, hinc longitudinaliter dehiscentia, bise- 
riata, in laciniis frondis contracte disposita. Indusium 
nullum. Sporule subtriangulares, striate, glabre.—Filicule 
Brasiliane, rhizoma repente. Frondes cespitose, dissimiles ; 
sterilis multifida, pinnulis linearibus dichotomis ; fertiles tri- 
pinnate, pinnulis sporangiferis, contractis; vene furcate— 
Gard. in Hook. Lond. Journ. Bot. 1, p. 133. 
Coptophyllum buniifolium ; glabrum, fronde sterili ovata mul- 
tipartita, laciniis elongatis dichotomis, fertili laxe paniculata. 
Gard. l. ¢. 
Anemia dichotoma. Gard. Herb. Bras. n. 4084. 
Has. Among the débris of schistose rocks on the summit of 
the Serra de Natividade, in the north of the province of 
Goyaz, Brazil. 
This and the following elegant little Fern, I have separated 
from the genus Anemia, principally on account of their fertile 
fronds rising distinctly from the rhizoma; and being in no way 
connected with the stipes of the haven fronds. This latter 
circumstance characterizes the true Anemias, for in them the 
frond which bears the spikes of fructification is formed by the 
union of two fertile fronds with one barren one. Since my 
papers in the Journal of Botany were written, I have examined 
the anatomical structure of the fertile frond of Anemia Phylli- 
tidis, Sw., and I find that three nearly distinct bundles of 
annular ducts can be traced to the top of the stipes, where they 
at last separate, one running into the barren, and one into 
each of the fertile portions. Link, I find, entertains similar 
views on the structure of Anemia.—G. Gardner. 
Fig. 1. Sporangium. /. 2. Sporules :—magnified. 
