566 PLANTiE JAVANIGiE RARIORES. 



as being readily distinguishable by the sorus originating at 

 the point of confluence of several veins. 



With respect to Dipteris, the section to which our 

 plant belongs, there is no difficulty in distinguishing it 

 from all other groups of Polypodium, and particularly from 

 that now alluded to, if the dichotomous ramification of the 

 primary veins be admitted into its definition. And as 

 that ramification may be said to be necessarily connected 

 with the peculiar division of the frond, this section, so con- 

 stituted appears to rest on characters at least as important 

 as those of several groups at present generically distin- 

 guished from Polypodium, as Cyclophorus, Pleopeltis, Adeno- 

 phorus, and even Grammitis, Selliguea, and Menisciura. 



If, however, the dichotomous primaiy veins are left out 

 of consideration, no sufficient character remains to distin- 

 guish Dipteris from that section of Polypodium, including 

 P. quercifolium, diversifolium, and several other species, 

 and which M. Bory has established, chiefly from the pre- 

 sence of dissimilar sterile fronds, as a subgenus under the 

 name of Drynaria. But the existence of these sterile 

 fronds being neglected, Drynaria cannot be separated from 

 that more extensive section comprehending P. phymatodes, 

 lycopodioides, &c., and to which (including Drynaria) I 

 have referred in my observations on Matonia, in Dr. 

 Wallich's Plantce Asiatica Bariores} 



These three subdivisions of Polypodium agree in having 

 their sori placed on the point of confluence, or perhaps 

 sometimes of divarication, of several branches of the anas- 

 tomosing veins ; and Dipteris being distinguished by its 

 dichotomous primary veins, the remaining two sections 

 may form one subgenus, for which the name proposed by 

 M. Bory may be adopted. 



In many species of Drynaria so constituted, the prin- 

 cipal vein of the sorus is manifestly that in which the ten- 

 dency to produce capsules is generally the greatest in the 

 natural order ; namely, the lowest branch of the upper or 

 inner side of the primary vein, or that branch which in the 

 appendix to Captain Flinders's Voyage^ is considered as 



' [Ante, p. Z^?,.'] 2 \_VoL\,p..m.'\ 



