300 45, NEPHEOLEPIS. 



Polyp. Linn. Aspid. Sw. Hk. Sp. 4. p. 48. — j8, N. apiifolium, Hk. & Arn. ; 

 larger and more compound ; Xov^qx pinnae deltoid, 1 ft. or more 1. ; rachis broad- 

 winged above, often free below; sori sometimes immersed. — :A. latifolium, 

 Presl. Hk. Sp. A. p. 51. A. dilaceratum, Kze. 



Hab. Cuba and Mexico southward to Brazil and Peru, Polynesian and Malayan 

 Islands, Himalayas (up to 4,000 ft.), Neilgherries, Ceylon, Mascaren Isles, Zambesi-land, 

 Angola, Guinea Coast. — This includes all the Eusagcnice (six species) of Moore's Index. 

 The extremes differ in size very much, but all the forms appear to agree in sori and 

 venation. Grammatosorus Blumeanus, Kegel, Gartenfl. 1866, p. 385, is probably a form 

 of this with abnormal sori. 



222. _N. (Sagen.) GriffitMi,^ Baker ; st. 1-2 ft. 1., brownish, not glossy ; fr. 3-4 

 ft. 1., with a large terminal pinna cut down nearly to the rachis in the lower part 

 into lanceolate divisions, with deep lanceolate-acuminate lobes, below this several 

 pinnse on each side, the lowest deltoid, 1 ft. or more 1., by nearly as broad, deeply 

 pinnatifid above," pinnate below ; texture papyraceo-herbaceous ; main veins dis- 

 tinct to the edge, with copious free included veinlets ; sori rather large, in two 

 rows, nearly all terminating free veinlets. 



Hab. Burmah, Griffith. — This comes nearest the largest forms of the preceding, but 

 the venation is closer, and it has copious free veins, and sori not on the connected veinlets. 



223. N. (Sagen.) sim7ilans, Baker; st. tufted, 1-1^ ft., castaneous, naked, like 

 rachises ; basal scales linear, dark-brown ; fr. deltoid, 1^-2 ft. each way, tripin- 

 natifid ; lowest pinnae largest, deltoid, stalked, with several large lanceolate deeply 

 pinnatilid^^M^H^. ; texture thin but firm ; surfaces naked, bright-green ; areolae few, 

 except costal arches ; sori medial, uniseriate near ribs, terminal on free veins ; inv. 

 large, glabrous. — N, giganteum, edit. 1, ex parte. Sagenia Thwaitesii, .Sec?t7. F.S.I. 

 t. 244, 



Hab. Ceylon, Thwaitcs, C. P. 3331, Wall. — The true giganteum has grey rachises, 

 compital sori, and Pleocncmia venation. 



224. N. (Sagen.) macrophyllum, Baker ; st. tufted, 1-2 ft. 1., dull brownish, 

 scaly below ; fr. 2-3 ft. 1., 1 ft. or more br., with a large terminal pinna, often 

 forked at the base, and 4-8 lanceolate-oblong lateral ones on each side, 6-12 in. 1., 

 1-3 in. br., entire or slightly lobed, the lowest pair forked at the base ; texture 

 papyraceo-herbaceous ; rachis and both surfaces usually naked ; primary veins 

 continued nearly to the edge, with numerous fine areolas with free included 

 veinlets between them ; soH in 2 rows between each primary vein. — Aspid. 

 Swz. Hk. Sp. 4. p. 56. 



Hab. Tropical America, from Cuba and Mexico to Brazil and Peru, — The IMalayan 

 A. Hacnhei, Presl, is either a form of this or very near it. 



Gkn, 45. Nepurolepis, Schott. 



Sori round, arising from the apex of the upper branch of a vein, generally 

 near the edge, Invol. reniform or roundish. Veins in all free, the fronds simpli/ 

 pinnate, with the pinnae articulated at the base and often very deciduous in the dried 

 plant, with tchite cretaceous dots on the upper surface. Belts the world in the 

 Tropics, 2Mssing a little beyond them both north cmd south. Tab. V. f. 46. 



1. N. cordifolia, Presl; caud. suber(?ct or oblique, the wiry fibres often 

 bearing tubers ; st. tufted, wiry, 1-4 in. 1., slightly scaly ; fr. 1-2 ft. 1., 1^-2 in. 

 br. ; pinnoe close, often imbricated, about 1 in. 1., -^-{f in. br., usually blunt, the 

 edge entire or sliglitly crenate, the under side rounded or cordate, the upper 

 distinctly auricled at the liase ; texture iiu])coYiaceous ; rac//25 slightly scaly ; both 

 sides nearly nak-ed ; sori in a row about midway l)ctween the midrib and edge ; 

 invol. firm, distinctly reniform, oblique or opening towards the outer edge. — 



