104 20. LINDSAYA, § EULINDSAYA. 



Hab. Silesia, Sudetes of Moravia, .and the Carpathians, — This species combines the 

 Labit of C. montana with tlie texture of 0. fragilis. 



5. C. montana, Link ; rhizome wide-creeping ; st. slender, erect, 6-9 in. 1. ; fr, 

 about G in. each wa_y, deltoid, quadripinnatifid ; lowest pinnl. deltoid-lanceolate, 

 1-1| in. 1., |-f in. br. ; segm. cut down to the rachis below, the lobes oblong, 

 2 lin. 1., 1 lin. br., deeply and sharply toothed ; texture thinly herbaceous ; sori 

 small, 18 to 24 to the lower segments.— ^-5r. Sp.l.p. 200. Brit. Ferns, t. 25. 



Hab. Mountains of Scandinavia, Scotland (very rare), and Central Europe ; Katn- 

 schatka, east side of the Rocky Mountains, N. America, Labrador, Canada West. 



TraBE 5. LiNDSAYEyE. 



Sori placed in a line at or very near the edge of the frond, cohered with an 

 involucre, the inner valve of which is membranaceous, the outer {^obsolete in Dicty- 

 oyi\^\\\.\i.m) formed of the margin of the frond. Gen. 20-20*. 



Gen. 20. Lindsaya, Dryand. (See page 471.) 



Scyri marginal or submarginal, placed at the apex of and uniting two or more 

 veins. Invol. double, opening outwardly, the inner valve membranaceous, the 

 outer formed of the more or less changed (scarcely changed in Diellia and some 

 other species) margin of the frond. A moderately extensive genus, only a few 

 species of lohich pass outside the tropics, most, but not all, the species of which have 

 one-sided pellucido-herbaceous or coriaceous pinnce, approximating in shape to a 

 quarter of a circle. Tab. II. f. 20. 



§ Eulindsaya. Pinnce unilateral, veins fi~ee. Sp. 1-25. A well-marJced section, 

 which has its head-quarters in Tropical America, Asia, and Polynesia, but reaches 

 the Mauritius, Japan, and Australia, with the habit o/'Adiantum, with fronds often 

 j)ellucid. 



f Main rachis unbranched. Sp. 1-12. 



1. L. linearis, Swartz ; rhizome wiry, creeping ; st. wiry, flexuose, black, 

 shining, 4-8 in. 1. ; fr. 6-12 in. 1., ^ in. br., simply pinnate ; pinnoe 3 lin. 1., 

 2 lin. deep, the upper edge very slightly toothed, the lower ones with often a 

 considerable space between them ; texture thickly pellucido-herbaceous ; sori in 

 a continuous line along the upper edge. —Hh. Sp. 1. p. 206. 



Hab. Australia, Van Diemen's Land, New Caledonia, and New Zealand. — 

 Pinnules often distinctly flabellate in shape, readily curling up when dry. It has much 

 the smallest pinnae of the unbranched group. 



2. L. falciformis. Ilk. ; rhizome short-creeping ; st. very short, close together; 

 fr. 3-4 in. 1., ^-| in. br., simply pinnate ; pinnce 4 lin. 1., \ in. deep, distinctly 

 falcate towards the outside, both margins entire, close together, but not imbri- 

 cated ; texture pellucido-herbaceous ; the costal vein parallel with the lower edge 

 at a short distance from it; sori in a continuous marginal line. — Hk. Sp. 1. 

 p. 208. t. 64. B. 



Hab. British Guiana ; gathered by Sir R. Schomburgk. — A very doubtful plant, 

 perhaps young, unbranched L. trapeziformis. 



3. L. adiantoides, J. Sm. ; si. nearly tufted, black, polished, wiry, 1-2 in. 1. ; 

 fr. 4-6 in. 1., about 1 in. br., simply pinnate ; pittnce ^ in. 1., \ in. deep, the upper 

 imbricated, the lower edge straight or slightly curved, the upper rounded and 

 broadly lobed about one-third of the way down ; texture pellucido-herbaceous ; 

 so}-i marginal in the lobes. — Ilk. Sp. I. p. 204. t. 61. C. L. hurailis, Kuhn. 



