262 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
both, in F. virens being ener equal to the capsule, sometimes 
markedly shorter. Nor can uny difference in size of plants, 
direction and width of leaf, or height of papilla. Moreover, Mr. 
Binstead’s plant combines the characters of the two, as given by 
Fleischer, having the slightly smaller size assigned by that author 
to F. virens, but the capsule lid equalling the capsule in length. 
F’. ceylonensis Doz. & Molk. Kandy (16). 
F. "pated Doz. & Molk. Shaded sandstone rock, Kandy, 
é. 
ae angustus Thw. & Mitt. I picked out a few stems of this 
apparently rare species = No. 388, Camptochete thamnioides, 
growing on wet rocks by water, Nuwara Eliya. 
=e nobilis Griff. Danip recesses of rock near waterfall, N. E. 
(258) 
F’. anomalus Mont. Rotting bark in deep shade by er 
Hakgala (91); tree in jungle below ioe loam N. E., c. fr. (253 
255); shaded rock by —— Rombodde Pass, c. oa (256) ; mossy 
sete 8000 ft., Ped., c. fr. (260). 
FF. gede hensis Fleisch. Roadside rock, half-way to Hakgala, 
N.E. (9 2). Agrees well with No. 22, Fleischer, M. Fr. Arch. Ind., 
except in having the leaves slightly broader and som oe more 
crisped when dry. It has been referred to F’. gedehensis by Dr. 
Brotherus. 
CALYMPERACER. 
Syrr rhopodon oe Thw. & Mitt. Tree-stump in ravine, and 
seu 
m) Kandy (2). 
. Fordii Besch. Poraaniys — Kandy (8, 9). I have 
given elsewhere (in a paper read before the Linnean Society, not 
Gh published) my apie for scucabting C. mete — _ 
PorriacEa, 
ig anes edentulum (Mitt.) Besch. Shaded sandstone 
rock, Kandy, 
near N. E. . ; ak vertical roadside rock, half-way ¢ ) ioe 
N. E. 
a. durtusculum (Mitt.) Broth. Dry rock in open, N. E., c. fr. 
(68); dry rock, Ped., c. fr. (82); tea bush, N. E. (90); boulder in 
stream under Ped. (265; 267). 
Hyophila cylindrica (Hook.) J - Open stone in tea garden, 
Uda: awa, c. fr. (401). This is somewhat intermedia 
between H. cylindrica and H. stenocarpa Ren. & Card., which is 
perhaps hardly ipacifieally distinct. 
