126 THE BOTANY OF BERMUDA. 
V.—HEPATICZ. 
Jungermannia, sp. 
Sphagnum palustre. Bog moss. 
VIL—FUNGI. 
The common mushroon, Agaricum campestris, Linn., appears rarely in 
Bermuda. They were to be found in 1852 near Pembroke church- 
yard. (Mr. Hurdis, in The Naturalist in Bermuda, p.176.) The writer 
has, however, never seen them wild. They were grown at Mount Lang- 
ton in an artificial cave from spawn imported from Halifax, and at times 
pretty abundant. The fungi of Bermuda, as an order, have not received 
attention. . 
