370 FEEN FAMILY, 



17. STRUTHldPTEBIS, OSTRICH-FERN (which the name means 

 in Greek, from the large plume-like sterile -fronds). 



S. Germ&,nica. Alluvial grounds, N. . sterile fronds tall, 2° -5° high, 

 lanceolate, narrowed at the base into a short angular stalk, pinnate ; pinnae 

 very many, narrowly lanceolate, pinnatifid more than half-way to the midrib ; 

 lobes numerous, oblong ; fertile fronds very much shorter, blackish, standing 

 erect after the others have withered. 



18. ONOCLEA. SENSITIVE-FERN. (Name, from the Greek, mean- 

 ing a closed vessel, referring to the berry-like fi-uctification. ) The only species is 

 O. sensibilis. Common in wet places : sterile fronds of all sizes up to 2° 



high, broadly triangular-ovate, the rhachis winged ; pinnae not many, lanceolate, 

 entire or obtusely lobed less than half-wliy to the midrib, veins everywhere 

 reticulated; fertile fronds with few closely appressed pinnae. 



19. WOODSIA. (For Joseph Woods, an English botanist.) 



W. obttisa. Rocky places, from Carolina N. : fronds 6' - 18' high, slightly 

 glandular, broadly lanceolate, pinnate with ovate or oblong deeply pinnatifid 

 or again pinnate divisions ; lobes oblong, obtuse ; indusium at first closed, 

 opening into a few ragged lobes. 



W. Ilv6nsis. Exposed rocks, common N., and along the Alleghanies: 

 forms large tufts ; fronds 4' - 8' high, rusty chaffy beneath, oblong-lanceolate, 

 pinnate ; divisions ovate, obtusely lobed ; indusium obscure, consisting of a 

 few jointed hairs. 



20. DAVALIiIA. (Named for ilf. DawaH, a Swiss botanist.) Many trop- 

 ical or sub-tropical species, the following cult, in conservatories. 



D. Canari6nsis, Hake's-Foot-Fekn, from the Canary Islands, etc. : 

 rootstock creeping above ground, covered with brownish scales, and looking not 

 unlike an animal's paw; fronds few, smooth, broadly triangular, 8'- 15' long 

 and about as wide, 3-4-pinnate; pinnules cut into a few narrow lobes ; these 

 are directed upwards, bearing at or just below the end a single fruit-dot ; indu- 

 sium whitish, deeply half-cup-shaped. 



D. tenuifblia, from India and China : rootstock creeping, crisp with short 

 chafiy hairs; fronds smooth, l'^-2° high, broadly lanceolate, 3 - 4-pinnate ; 

 smallest divisions narrowly wedge-shaped, bearing at the truncated ends one or 

 two fruitdots ; indusium brownish, mostly broader than deep. 



21. DICKSONIA. {For James Dickson, an English botanist.) The spe- 

 cies all but one tropical or in the southern hemisphere. 



D. punetildbula. Moist shady places, from N. Carolina N. : rootstock 

 creeping, slender ; fronds scattered, thin, minutely glandular, plea^^antly odor- 

 ous, lancelotfi, long-pointed, 2° - 3° high, mostly bipinnate ; pinnules pinnatifid ; 

 the divisions toothed, each bearing a minute fruit-dot at the upper margin ; 

 indusium globular. 



D. ant^Ctica. Tree-fem from New Zealand, a great ornament in large 

 conservatories: trunk 3' -5' thick, sometimes many feet high, bearing in a 

 crown at the top .many fronds, 6° - 9° long, 2° - 4° broad, coriaceous, twice 

 pinnate ; pinnules oblong, acute, pinnatifid ; the oblong-ovate divisions bearing 

 1-4 rather large fruit-dots ; indusium prominent, plainly two-valved. 



22. CYATHEA. (Name from the Greek word for a small cup, referring to 

 the involucre. ) Tree-ferns from tropical countries. 



C. arborea. Rarely cult, from W. Indies : trunk sometimes 20° high, 

 stalk mostly light-brown, and without prickles or chaff; fronds 4° - 1 0° long, 

 bipinnate ; pinnae 1° - 2° long, 6' - 8' wide, lanceolate ; pinnules narrowly lance- 

 olate, spreading, pinnatifid to the midrib ; lobes oblong, slightly serrate, with 

 4-9 fruit-dots nea'- the midvein ; involucre beautifully cup-shaped, the margin 

 entire. — Several other species, as well as one or two of the allied genus Kemi- 

 TELiA (with an imperfect involucre, veins often partly reticulated), are rarely 

 seen in conservatories. 



