265 



14. WOOD'!«IA, R. Brown. 



1. W. Ilven'SiS, E. Brown. Stalks indistinctly jointed at 

 some distance above the base. Fronds oblong-lanceolate, 

 2-6 inches long, rather smooth and green above, thickly 

 clothed below with bristly rusty chaff, pinnate ; the pinnae ob- 

 long, blunt, sessile, pinnately-parted with the segments 

 indistinctly crenate. Fruit dots near the margin. — Exposed 

 rooks, Atl. Prov. and northward. 



2. W. hyperbo'rea, R. Brown, stalks jointed. Fronds 

 narrowly oblong-lanceolate. Sparingly hairy beneath with 

 chaffy hairs, pinnate ; the pinnse triangular-ovate, pinnate- 

 ly lobed, the lobes few and almost entire. — Eavines, Atl. Prov. 

 and northward. 



3. W. glabel'la, E. Brown. Stalks jointed as in the two 

 preceding species. Frond linear, very delicate, smooth, pin- 

 nate. Pinnae roundish-ovate, the lower somewhat distant, 

 crenately-lobed. — Moist rocks, Atl. Prov. and northward. 



4. W. Obtu'sa, Torr. Stalks not jointed. Frond broadly 

 lanceolate, beset with small glandular hairs, once or nearly 

 twice pinnate. Pinnae pinnately parted. Segments of pinnae 

 orenately toothed. — Cliffs and rocky places ; rare. 



15. DlCKSO'SflA, L'Her. DiCKSONiA. 



D. punetilo'bula, Kunze. Pleasantly odorous.— Moist 

 shady places. 



16. OSmiN'DA, L. Floweuing Fern. 



1. 0. rega'lis, L. (Flowering Fern.) Fronds twice- 

 pinnate, fertile at the top, very smooth, pale green. Sterile 

 pinnules oblong-oval, finely serrate towards the apex, 1-2 

 inches long, either sessile or short-stalked, usually oblique 

 and truncate at the base. — Swamps, along streams and lake- 

 margins. 



2. 0. Claytonia'na, L. Fronds large, once-pinnate, pale 

 green, densely white-woolly when unfolding from the bud, 

 with fertile pinnae among the sterile ones. Pinnae deeply pin- 

 natifld, the lobes entire. — Low grounds. 



