108 
ACROSTICHUM ap ATUM. 
Appendaged Acrostichum. 
CRYPTOGAMIA FILICES.—Nart. Orv. FILICES. 
Gen. Cuar.—Capsule sparse, discum totum inferiorem frondis, vel ejus 
partem occupantes. Jndusium nullum. 
Acrostichum appendiculatum ; frondibus pinnatis, pinnis lanceolatis cre- 
natis basi sursum auriculatis, fertilium pinnis ellipticis integerrimis, 
rachi alato. 
A. appendiculatum? Wittp. Sp. Pl. v. 5. p. 114. 
A. viviparum, Hamitton’s MSS. 
Root creeping, scaly, throwing out downy fibres. Fronds from six or eight 
inches to three feet in height, the stipes of them being from four inches 
to a foot long, somewhat scaly, the rest is lanceolate, acuminate in its 
outline or circumscription, cut into numerous, simple, rather distantly 
placed pinnz, which are in themselves lanceolate, two or three inches in 
length, subfalcate, obtuse at the extremity, and bluntly crenate at the 
margins, the base truncate, or somewhat wedge-shaped, auricled above ; 
midrib not running through the centre, but nearer to the lower margin 
of the frond; the extremity somewhat caudate and bulbiferous ; bulbs 
scaly, and becoming new plants. Rachis and upper part of the stipes 
winged. ; 
Fertile fronds, in the individuals that have come under my observation, 
longer than the sterile ones, which arise from the same root ; pinnated 
above with elliptical, very obtuse, entire pinne, much smaller than the 
sterile ones, and covered on the under side with the numerous, brown, 
naked capsules. 
a 
Found at Nabovi, in Eastern Camrupa, in 1801, by Dr 
Bucuanan Hamitton, who named it in his MS. A. vivi- 
parum, though fully aware, at the same time, of its affinity 
with the 4. appendiculatum of WittpENnow. The only 
points of difference, as noticed by the latter author, are, that 
A. appendiculatum is a smaller plant, and has the fertile pin- 
VOL. I. 
