108 CYCLOCARPINE [STICTA 
small or moderate in size, scattered, plane or slightly convex, the 
margin naked, spores as in S. fuliginosa.”—S. F. Gray Nat. 
Arr. i. p. 431; Hook. Fl. Scot. ii. p. 59 & in Sm. Engl. FI. v. 
p- 207; Tayl. in Mackay Fl. Hib. ii. p. 152; Mudd Man. p. 87. 
Lichenoides polyschides villosum et scabrum, peltis parvis Dill. Hist. 
Muse. p. 199, t. 27, fig. 101 (1741). Lichen sylvaticus Huds. FI. 
os p. 453 (1762) ; ‘Light. Fl. Scot. p. 848 ; With. Arr. ed. 3, 
,. p. 71; Engl. Bot. t. 2298. Stietina sylvatica Nyl. Syn. Lich. i. 
ny 348 (1860) ; Cromb. Lich. Brit. p. 30 & Monogr, i. p. 268; 
ee Lich. Fl. p. 116; ed. 3, p. 109. 
Exsicc. Croall n. 487 Cromb. n. 134; Larb. Lich. Hib. 
n. 209; Leight. n. 109. 
Closely allied to the preceding but differing in the more developed 
thallus, the very different form of the lobes and the darker under 
surface. The isidia may be crowded as in S. fuliginosa, but generally 
they are less abundant and outline the shallow depressions. The 
apothecia are evidently very rare, the British specimens in the 
herbarium being all sterile. 
Hab. On mossy rocks, old walls and about the roots of trees in 
shady moist places.—Distr. Plentiful in the western districts of Great 
Britain and Ireland.—B. M. Bocconoc and near Penzance, Cornwall ; 
Lidford, Widdecombe, Meavy, Lustleigh, Cleeve and Bigbury, Devon; 
near Oswestry, Shropshire; Hafod, Cardiganshire ; Aberdovey, Dol- 
gelly, Barmouth and Rhewgreidden, Merioneth; Conway Falls, 
Carnarvonshire ; Anglesea; Mardale, Westmoreland; Keswick, 
Cumberland ; Egglestone, Durham ; The Cheviots, Northumberland ; 
New Galloway, Kireudbrightshire; Beld Craig, Moffat, Dumfries- 
shire; Falls of the Clyde, Lanarkshire ; Callender rocks near Stirling ; 
Inverary, Appin and Barcaldine, Argyll; Falls of Leny, Falls of Moness, 
Glen Lochay, Finlarig, Killin, Aberfeldy and Bracklinn Bridge, 
Perthshire; Reeky Linn, Forfarshire; Craig Cluny and Craig 
Coinnoch, Braemar, Aberdeenshire; 8. of Fort William and Rothie- 
murchus, Invernessshire; Cawdor Woods, Nairnshire; Blackwater 
Bridge and Killarney, Kerry; near Kylemore and Derryclare, Conne- 
mara, Galway; near Carrickfergus, Antrim. 
3. 8. Dufourii Del. Stict. p. 78, t. 6, fig. 22 (1823-25).— 
Thallus rather small, thin, smooth, glaucous-green or -brown, 
mostly smooth and somewhat shining, the lobes laciniate, crisp at 
the edges and minutely fimbriate, often also coralloid-isidiose on 
the margins and on the surface of the thallus, beneath slightly 
tomentose, often reticulately wrinkled, pale- to dark-brown, with 
one cyphelle. Apothecia unknown,.—S. ciliata Tayl. in Mackay 
Fl. pS ii. p. 152 (1836). S. fimbriata Tayl. in Lond. Journ. 
Sot. vi. p. 180 (1847). S. elegans Deak. ex Mudd Man, p. 89 
(1861), Stictina Dufourei Nyl. in Bull. Soc. Linn, Norm. sér. 2, 
ii. p. 500 (1868) ; Leight. Lich. Fl. p. 117; ed. 3, p. 110; Cromb. 
Monogr. i. p. 269. S. sylvatica subsp. Dufourei Cromb. Lich. 
Brit. p. 30 (1871). 
Ezsice. Cromb, n. 135; Leight. n. 173. 
