69G FiLicES. (ferns.) 



14. NEPHB.OLEPIS, Schott. 



Fruit-dots at the ends of the veins, in a series near the margin of the pinnse. 

 Indusium rcniform, often broadly so, fixed by the sinus, or by the arcuate base, 

 open obliquely toward the margin of the pinnoB. Fronds pinnate, elongated ; 

 the pinnae articulated to the rachis. Veins free, forked from the midrib, their 

 apices thickened. 



1. N. exaltata, Schott. Fronds linear, indefinitely elon{;ated, unfolding 

 numerous pinniE, which are oblong-lanceolate, auriculate on the upper side of 

 the base, rounded on the lower side, falcate, crenately serrate ; fruit-dots large ; 

 indusium rcniform or crescent-shaped, the oblique sinus narrow and deep or 

 broad and shallow on the same pinna;. — South Florida, Dr. Cooper. — Fronds 

 l°-6° long, 2' -3' wide, usually pendent from the trunks of trees. 



15. ONOCLEA, L. 



Fertile fronds contracted, the pinnules strongly revolute and berry-like ; fruit- 

 dots on the back of the free veins, with an elevated receptacle ; indusium attached 

 partly to the receptacle and partly to the intervenular surface. Sterile fronds 

 foliaceous, much taller than the fertile ones. 



1. O. seusibilis, L. Sterile fronds on a, long smooth stipe, broadly 

 deltoid-ovate, pinnatifid almost or quite to the rachis ; the divisions lanceolate, 

 entire or crenately incised ; veins finely reticulated with oblong-hexagonal 

 areoles ; fertile fronds shorter, bipinnate ; pinnte erect, appressed to the rachis ; 

 the .pinnules crowded. — Meadows and wet places, Florida to Mississippi, and 

 northward. — Eootstock nearly naked, creeping. Fronds varying from four 

 inches to three feet in height. 



16. WOODSIA, R. Brown. 



Fruit-dots on the back of the veins ; the involucres placed beneath the fruit- 

 dot, saucer-shaped or cup-shaped, divided into irregular lobes or u, delicate 

 fringe, or sub-globose and contracted at the mouth. Small Ferns with maiiy 

 fronds from a short scaly rootstock. 



* Involucre fringed, the hair-Uke divisions incurved on the sporangia. 



1. W. Ilvensis, R Brown. Fronds sparingly hairy above, villous be- 

 neath and on the stipe and rachis with brown hairs and narrow chaff, lanceolate, 

 pinnate ; pinnae ovate-oblong, deeply pinnatifid, the divisions oblong, obtuse, 

 entire or crenate. Fruit-dots enveloped in the fringe of the involucre. — Rocks 

 along the Alleghany Mountains, and northward. — Fronds 3' - 8' high. 



* * Involucre divided into a few irregular lobes. 



2. W. obtusa, Torr. Fronds nearly smooth, broadly lanceolate, pinnate, 

 or near the rachis bipinnate ; pinnae triangular-ovate, the lower ones distant, 

 pinnately parted ; segments oblong, obtuse, the upper ones toothed, the lower 

 ones pinnatifid with toothed lobes ; veins forked, the tips whitish on the upper 

 surface of the frond ; fruit-dots on the lobules ; involucre delicate, the lobes 



