Okdbe 160.— FILICE& 819 



S. Germdnioa Willd. A Fern of noble porte, in low woods and swamps, N. 

 States and Can., common. The sterile fronds are often 5 or 6f high, commonly 

 about 3f, numerous, in a circular dump. Stipes smooth, channeled. PinnEO nu- 

 merous, crowded, long, linear, each with numerous oblong segments of which the 

 lowest is longer and acute, all more or less connected at base. Fertile fronds few 

 in the midst of the sterile, much smaller, the pinnae aubterete, 1 to 2 ' long, crowded. 

 Sori about 5 in each segment, on the raised ends of as many veinlets. Aug. 



9. PTE^RIS, L. Brake. Rock Brake. (Gr. Trrepdv, a wing.) 

 Sori borne on the ends of the veins forming a marginal line, covered 

 with the membranous, reflected edge of the frond. — Fronds ouce to 

 thrice pinnate or decompound. 



§ Frond pedato, or tomato and biplnnatifld. Sori in a continuous lino Nos. 1, 2 



§ Frond partly bipinnato. Sori at first distinct but Boon continuous Nos. 8, 4 



1 P. aquilina L. Common Brake. Frond 3-parted ; branches bipinnate ; Ifts. 

 oblong-lanceolate, lower ones piunatifid, upper ones entire; segments oblong, 

 obtuse. — Abundant in woods, pastures and waste grounds. Fern 2 — 5f in height, 

 upon a smooth, dark purple, erect stipe. Frond broad-triangular in outline, con- 

 sisting of 3 primary divisions, which are again subdivided into obtusely pointed, 

 sessile leaflets. These are entire above, becoming gradually indented towards 

 itp base of each subdivision. Sori covered by the folding back of the very mar- 

 gins of the segments. 



13. OAUDATA. Segm. of the pinnae linear oblong, the terminal one much elon- 

 gated. — The common Southern form. 



2 P. pedata Wind. Frond temately parted, the lateral divisions 2-parted, all 

 loinnatifidj segm. linear-lanoeolato, acute, the lowest segment of the terminal 

 division pinnatifid ; terminal division long-cuneiform at base, recesses acute. — On 

 rooks, Ta. (Pursli). Fern about 6' high. 



3 P. atropurpiirea L. Book Brake. Frond pinnate; rachis hairy; lower 

 lits, ternate or pinnate, segments lance-oblong, obtuse, obliquely truncate or sub- 

 cordate at the petiolate base. — Fern 6 — 10' high, growing on rocks, Can., Wis,, 

 Vt. to Tenn. I and Ala. I Frond twice as long as wide, of a grayish hue, the two 

 lower divisions consisting of 1 — 3 pairs of leaflets With a long, terminal segment. 

 All the segments distinct, with margins conspicuously revolute. Some of the 

 larger have 1 or 2 auricles at base. Stipe and rachis dark purple, with dense, 

 paleaceous hairs at base. June — Aug. (AUosorus, Gr. P. Akibamensis Buckley, 

 when the upper segments are generally aurided.) 



4 P. gracilis Michx. Frond slender, lanceolate, sterile ones pinnffte, leaflets 

 pinnatifid, segments broad-ovate, obtuse ; fertile bipinnate, leaflets hnear-oblong, 

 crenate. — A delicate species, growing on rocks. Fern 4 — 6' high, smooth and 

 shining throughout. Both this and No. 3 are homogeneous in habit with the 

 others. Their separation to a new genus is an over-refinement. ( Allosoras, Presl.) 



10. CHEILAN'THES, Swartz. Lip Fern. {Gt. x^^og, a. h^i, dvOog ; 

 from the form of the indusia.) Sori roundish, distinct, situated at the 

 margin or apex of the segments ; indusia distinct, formed from the 

 reflected margin and opening inwards.-.— Segments of the frond with the 

 midvein central. 



1 C vestita Swartz. Stipe and rachis hairy; frond bipinnate, oblong-ovate in 

 outUne, hairy on both sides ; leaflets alternate ; segments oblong, alternate, ses- 

 sile, distinct, crenately pinnatifid, the ultimate segment very entire ; sori distinct, 

 their indusia unchanged. — Eocky banks, Penn. to Mo. and South. Stipe slender, 

 rigid, 2 — 3' long, dark brown. Fronds 3 — 6' by 1 — 2'. Leaflets lance-ovate in 

 outline, 6 — 12" long. A small and dehcate, hairy Fern. Jl. 



2 C. tomentosa Link. Stipe stout, and with the rachis and frond clothed with 

 a dense feri-uginous wool ; frond tripinnate, ultimate segments rounded or oblong, 

 obtuse (upper ones confluent), fruit-bearing around the whole margin. — N. Car. 

 (Curtis) and Tenn. Fern If to 18' high, much larger and more hairy than the 

 preceding. Both species are less hairy on the upper than the under surface. 



