44. XEPURODIUM, §§ EUNEPHRODILM. 287 



to a ■winged rachis into small oblong, or linear, sharply-toothed lobes ; texture 

 coriaceous ; rachises fibrillose ; both surfaces glossy ; sori copious. — Ilk. Sp. 4. 

 p. 150. 



Hab. New Zealand, Australia (very rare). A well-marked plant. 



151. N. (Last.) denticnlatum. Ilk. ; st. tufted, 1 ft. or more 1., densely clothed 

 with linear scales at the base, naked above ; //'. 1-2 ft. 1., 8-12 in. br., deltoid ; 

 lower pinnm much the largest ; lowest pinnl. larger than the others, which are 

 lanceolate or subdeltoid, with segm. which are again pinnate, with spathulate or 

 subrhomboidal lobes with spinose teeth ; texture coriaceous ; rachis and both 

 sides naked, glossy ; sori scattered, copious. — Hk. Sp. 4. p. 147. — A. Klotzschii, 

 Hk. 2nd Cent. t. 23. 



Hab. W. Indies and Guatemala to S. Brazil. — There is a very rigid variety {A. dis- 

 tectum, Fie) with linear, mucronate alternate divisions. 



152. N. (Last.) davallioides, Ba.]ier ; rAe^iomc stout, wide-creeping ; 5^. strong, 

 l|-2 ft. 1., brownish, naked, the dense fibrillose scales confined to the base ; fr. 

 3-4 ft. 1., 2 ft. or more br., deltoid ; lower pinnce often 1 ft. 1. by nearly as 

 broad ; pinnl. deltoid, with lanceolate or deltoid scgm., the lobes of which are 

 again deeply pinnatifid ; all the divisions unequal-sided, the ultimate ones 

 small, sublinear, mucronate ; texture subcoriaceous ; rachis and both sides nearly 

 naked ; sori small, copious ; invol. firm, reniform. — Lastrea, Brack, p. 202. 



Hab. Fiji, Tahiti, and Samoa. — The alliance of this is with the next species, but it is 

 much more finely cut. 



153. N. (Last.) effusum. Baker ; rhizome short-creeping ; st. 2 ft. I. or more, 

 polished, slightly scaly below ; fr. 3-4 ft. 1., 2 ft. or nrore br., 4-5 pinnatifid ; 

 lower pinnce 12-18 in. 1., often 1 ft. br. ; pinnl. close, lanceolate, acuminate ; 

 segjn. lanceolate or subdeltoid, unequal-sided, the lower ones cut down to the 

 rachis into oblon?, pinnatifid, bluntish lobes, often \ in. br. ; texture sub- 

 coriaceous ; rachises usually scaly ; both sides pale-green, glossy, naked ; sori 

 copious, scattered ; invol. generally absent. — ■ Polyp, divergens, Hk. Sp. 4. 

 /?. 205. P. multifidum, Jacq. Ic. t. G43. — /3, iV. excultum, Hk. ; fr. often tripin- 

 natifid only, the ult. divisions always broader and less deeply cut. — Ilk. Sp. 4. 

 p. 149. 



Hab. Cuba and Mexico to Brazil and Peru. — P. cffusum and exctdtum appear to be 

 less, and P. divergens more divided forms of the same plant, P. ddatatum, Liebni. 

 Hk. Sp. 4. p. 264, does not diflfer materially. 



§§ Eunephrodium. Lower vcinlets of contiguous groups united. 

 Sp. 154-190. 



* Fronds ligulate, not cut down to the rachis unless at the very base. 

 Sp. 154-158. 



154. N. Cumingiamim, J. Sm. ; st. tufted, slender, naked, 2-4 in. 1. ; fr. 3-4 

 in. 1., ^-| in, br., lanceolate-oblong, narrowed gradually at both ends, entire or 

 slightly sinuated ; texture subcoriaceous ; both surfaces naked ; veins pinnate, in 

 groups of 2-3 on a side. — Ilk. Sp. 4. p. 63. 



Hab. Panama, 



155. N. Skinncri, Hk. ; st. tufted, slender, villose, 2-3 in. \.',fr. G-8 in. 1., 

 |-1 in. br., lanceolate-acuminate, terminating abruptly below, with oblong- 

 falcate subentire lobes reaching halfway down in the centre, and often quite to 

 the rachis at the base ; texture papyraceo-herbaceous ; lower side, especially the 



