﻿81 



Mull. Synop. ii. 295. (H. patale Hook. & Wils. Flor. Nov. Z. ; 

 Flor. Tasman.). 



Ptychomnion aciculare (Hypn.) Brid. (H. giganteum Menzies, 

 MS. e specim. auctoris). 



Bryol. Univ. ; Hook. f. & Wils.) ; Mniodendron Lindb.).— H. comatum 

 ('. Mull. Synops. {Isothecium Colensoi Hook. & Wils. 

 Flor. Tasm. ; J. comatum Hook. f. Handbook).— H. spininervium 

 (Hypnum) Hook. Mas. Exot. tab. 29. (Isothecium Flor. Nov. Z. ; 

 Hook. f. Handbook).—//, marginatum (Hypnum) Hook. & Wils.— 

 H. Menziesii (Hypnum) Hook. Mus. Exot. (Isothecium H. f. & W. 

 Flor. Nov. Z.; Hook. Handbook; Sciadocladus Lindberg). — H. 

 Kerrii ( Trachyloma) Mitt. (Isothecium Hook. Handbook; Sciado- 

 cladus Lindberg). 



Mniadelphus rotundifolius H. f. & W. (Hookeria ; Flor. N.Z. 

 No. 207 is with, or upon, Ihirtntmia t, »uix).—M. micr<>n(rpm(Hookeria) 

 H. f. & W. (Hypnum microcarpum Hedw. ; Pterygophyllum Jajger). 



Pterygophyllum quadrifarium Schwaeg. (Hookeria Schwaeg. ; 

 Brid. Bryol. Univ.). 



Eriopus cristatus (Leskea) Hedw. (Hookeria cristata Arnott ; C. 

 Mull. Synops.). 



Cyathophorum pennatum Brid. (Hookeria pennata Hook. Mus. 

 Exot. t. 163). 



Hypopterygium Jiliculaforme Brid. (Leskea filiculaformis Hedw.) . 

 —H. discolor Mitt, in Hook. Handbook. — H. Nova Zelandia C. 

 Mull. (H. Smithianum H. & W. Flor. Nov. Zel.) Tbis species 

 seems very abundant and fine in Tasmania, — H. oceanicum Mitt, in 

 Hook. Handbook. Intermixed witb Mniadelphus rotundifolius.— jf. 

 tamarisci Brid. ; Hook. Handb. (Leskea tamariscina Hedw. ; H. 

 commutatum G. Mull. ?). —H. concinnum Brid. Hook. Handb. 

 (Leskea concinna Hook. Mus. Exot. ; Lopidium H. f. & Wils. Fl. 

 N.Z.). — H. pattern Jffiger. (Lopidium H. f. & W. ; H. struthiopteris 

 Mitt. ; H. f. Handb.). 



Rieopilum atrumifmim C. Mull. (R. australe H. & W. Flora 



notice than i 



Nothing in the general appear- 

 ance of the moss seemed to indicate anything more than a some- 

 what shortish state of the ordinary F " ' 



Europe 



Zealand and Tasmania the place filled in 

 pe ana iNortn America by D. scoparium, though perhaps less 

 ble than that well-known and abundant species. But the 



puzzling circumstance in the present case was that on examination 

 several stems in succession were found to bear leaves without any 

 trace of nerve or midrib, though otherwise their structure was as 

 usual in Dicranum. No fructification is present, and the suggestion 

 followed that here might be a specie s of Hwamptudnn for the first 

 Journal of Botany.— Vol. 32. [March, 1894.] o 



