88 18. DAVALLIA, § nUMATA. 



sori 1 to G, minute, axillary, the tube stalked, the mouth truncate. T. longise- 

 tuni, Borj/, V.D.B. Hj/m. Jav. t. 21. 



Hab. Borneo, Java, Samoa, Bourbon. — A very singular plant, with the segments 

 spreading in all directions, and not at all flattened. 



78. T. foeniculaceum, Bory ; st. nearly tufted, erect, wiry, 2-4 in. 1., naked or 

 tomentose ; fr. 4-8 in. 1., l|-3 in. br., erect, rigid, ovate-lanceolate ; main racMs 

 naked or slightly vv^inged above ; lower pinnce spreading or erecto-patent, 1-1 J 

 in. 1., cut down quite or very nearly to the racliis ; pinnl. regularly pinnatifid, 

 with simple or forked linear-filiform sepm. 1-1 ^ lin. 1., colour dark-green or 

 brovvnish-lilack when dry, texture subcoriaceous; sori 2 to 12 to a pinna, minute, 

 axillary, the mouth rather spreading, but not tvvo-lijjped. — Hk. /Sp. 1. p. 135. 

 {in part). T. parviflorum (Poir.) oldest name. 



Hab. Mauritius, Bourbon, Borneo, and Rockingham Bay, Australia (T. setilolmm, 

 F. Mueller, MS3.). — Intermediate between rigidum and longisetum, the segments rather 

 flattened. 



Tribe 4. Davallie.^. 



Sori marginal or sithmarginal, roundish, covered hy a reniform or suhorlicular 

 squamiform immlucre, which is open at the apex, fastened broadly at the base, and 

 open or free at the sides. Gen. 18-19. 



Gen. 18. Davallia, Smith. (See page 4G7.) 



Sori intra- or sub-marginal, globose or elongated either laterally or vertically. 

 Invol. terminal on the veins, various in shape, united or free at the sides, the apex 

 always free. Caps stalked. A large genus, which has its head-quarters in the 

 Tropics of the Old World. Fronds various in size and division, herbaceous or 

 coriaceous ; veins always free ; rhizome usually wide-creeping and scaly. There 

 are four principal types in the shape of the involucre (see plate), of which 

 Microlepia connects Eudavallia with Dicksonia and Odontoloma with Lindsaya. 

 Tab. II. f. 18. 



§ Humata, Cav. Invol. ample, coriaceous, suborhicular or reniform, attached by a 

 broad base, the apex and sides free. — Sp. 1-11. Fronds in all coriaceous, usually 

 deltoid, 3 ^0 6 inches long, more or less distinctly dimorphous, the barren ones hardly 

 more than once pinnattfid. All plants of the Malayan islands, one reaching the 

 Himalayas and the Mauritius. Sp. 12 is an anomalous simply pinnate S. American 

 plant, which seems best placed here. 



* Barren fronds entire. Sp. 1-2. 



1. D. (Hum.) heterophylla, Smith; r/'/^owe wide-creeping, scaly ; /r. shortly 

 stalked, 3-6 in. L, 1 in. br., glabrous ; texture coriaceous, the sterile one ovate- 

 lanceolate, entire or slightly lobed at the base, the fertile one narrower, deeply 

 sinuato-pinnatifid ; sori 2 to 10 to a lobe. — Hk.-Sp.l, p.\52. Fil.Ex.t.'LI. 

 Hk. c^' Gr. Jc. Fil. t. 230. 



Hab. Malayan Peninsula and Polynesiaan Islands. 



2. D. (Hum.) anguf;tata,W &\\\ii\\ ; r/izVome wide-ci'eeping, scaly ; /r. subsessile 

 or shortly stalked, 8-8 in. ]., i-& in. br., linear, slightly and irregularly crenate 

 at the margin, sometimes once forked ; texture coriaceous, l)oth surfaces naked ; 

 sori in a row along the edges. — Hk. Sp. l.p. 152. Hk. <& Gr. Ic, Fil, t. 231. 



Hab. Malayan Peninsula and Islands. 



