THE 
JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
BRITISH AND FOREIGN. 
—>———_ 
BRYOLOGICAL NOTES. 
By Ervzsr §. Saton, F.L.S. 
(Continued from Journ. Bot. 1901, p. 365.) 
(Puate 429.) 
N my previous note (Journ. Bot. 1901, p. 860) on Anomodon 
Toccoe Sulliv. & Lesq., I mentioned that “ Toccoa Falls, Northern 
Georgia ’—the type locality for the species—was the only station 
known in North America. I have, however, just received, through 
the kindness of Mrs. Britton, a specimen (no er- 
barium) of A. Toccoe from the “Falls - the Yadkin River, North 
Vo ae where it was collected by - K. Small, in August, 
1892. It is & interesting to find that this example is distinctly 
flagelliferou 
21). Cutnese Mosszs. 
nee’ a few mosses lately brought back from China by Dr. 
A. Henry there occurs a new — s of Catharinea. The following 
is the desoription of the plan 
Cathari nea Henryi, sp. n. (figs. 1-8). Dioica ?, ean es 
mill. longis, 1°5 mill. summis pains cire. 
longis, 1°8 mill. latis, sation areata petiehetalbns i fiw 
centimetrum et ultra longis, usage argine ulato anguste 
apicem versus validis plerumgue geminatis, ac sat valido infra 
folii summum apicem do, apicem versus subtus spinoso- 
denticulato, lamellis panels: co -4) humillimis ‘% uno strato (1-3) 
cellularum constructis, foliis superioribus | et summis interdum 
leniter transversaliter undulatis subtus apicem versus denticulis 
sparsis hispidis, cellulis foliorum superioribus rotundato-quadrato- 
hexagonis chlorophyllosis, 15-20 » latis, basilaribus rectangulis, 
fructu ex eodem pericheetio solitario vel binato, capsula in pedunculo 
Journal or Botany.—Vor. 40. [Jan. 1902.] 
