306 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
£ 
yarn Fl. g (unus solum ae parva , bractei revibus, 
cuspidatis, —— ‘st is, elongatis. lot s 2 in ramulis 
propriis ad m super orum axillas sub fronde conditis basi 
pitts Riese poreetae piahagoniis pacvis, multis (12-16), bracteis 
perichetialibus internis superne linearibus, oe vaginantibus 
see Seg e anguste limbatis. Gainen i 
Hab. On stones near a fall shite bag és Dhobis’ Waterfall, 
— - 1909 ; leg. Sedgwick (no. 51), st. 
species, quite distinct ions all others of the section 
Packafsstiay in the shorter, wider leaves with stout border to 
the lower part of the vaginant lamina. The other Oriental species 
of the section are quite opamaste and for the most part do not differ 
greatly from F’. grandifrons Brid. 
Calymperes (orn) tortelloides Broth. & Dixon, sp. 
nov. (Tab. 507, fig.2.) Dioicum. Dense ceespitosum, atro- vixide, 
inferne sordido-fuscum ; caulis decumbens, ramis asc scendentibus, 
r 
elongatum subito contracta; margine plano, integro; costa valida, 
60-70 p lata, apud apicem folii tantum angustata, percurrens ve 
in cuspidem « crassum sepe papillosum excurrens; in sectione trans- 
verse shasta cellulis ventralibus numerosis sat mis, ducibus 
o- tralibus, stereidearum fasciculis duobus, cellulis dorsalibus 
‘ieeis.: _ Inter folia core ia alia n onnulla perangusta elongate 
tenuibus, firmis; basilares juxta costam ann, rectan ails ares, 
hyaline, marginales seriebus pluribus anguste lineares, chloro- 
phyllosee, | a circa quartam partem folii occupantem 
Chieed: ‘oniisis vel prinerenng| parva, ovata, castanea, nitida, 
‘75 mm. onga; versus orificium comevemensrs paullo co ree 
longirostre (vagirala Fanatics um, 0 reulum, — abi. 
quilonga). Spori nue it leeves. sum, oer ud vi 
- On trees, 4000-4500 ft , Mabableshrar, Western Ghats, 
Jan. 1909; leg. Sedgwick (n no. 54), 
_ A very distinet species, in habit and foliation closely resem- 
bling members of the Pottiacee (whence the e specific name); and 
not likely to be mistaken for any of the Indian or Malayan species 
of the genus. It is perhaps nearest to C. Motleyi Mitt. and 
C. tenerum O. M., but the leaf outline and apex are quite different. 
and the areolation distinct. The upper and 
_Cancellina pass more gradually than is often the case into the 
