820 Oeder 160.— MLICES. 



11. ADIAN'TUffl L. Maiden-haib. (Gr. a, privative, dcaivo), to 

 moisten ; as the rain slides off without wetting it.) Sori oblong or 

 roundish, marginal ; indusia membranaceous, formed from the reflexed 

 margins of distinct portions of the frond and opening inwardly. — Stipe 

 polished. Ultimate segments dimidiate, the midvein on the lower 

 margin. 



1 A. pedatum L. Frond pedate ; diviaiona pinnate ; segments oblong-rhomboid, 

 incisely lobed on the upper side, obtuse at apex ; sori oblong, subulate. — This is, 

 doubtless, the most beautiful of all our ferns, abounding in damp, rooky woods. 

 Stipe 8 — 14' high, slender, of a deep, glossy purple approaching to a jet-black. 

 At top it divides equally into 2 compound branches, each of which gives off, at 

 regular intervals, 6 — 8 simply pinnate leaflets from the outer side, giving the 

 whole frond the form of the crescent. July. 



2 A. Curtisii, N. sp. (We .saw specimens of a new Adiantum in the herbarium 

 of Rev. M. A. Curtis, from the Mts. of N. Car. But our notes are insufBcient at 

 present for its proper diagnosis.) 



12. DICKSO^NIA L'Her. (luhonorof James Dickson, a distinguished 



English cryptogamist.) Sori marginal, roundish, distinct, terminating 

 a vein ; indusium double, the proper one cup-shaped, opening outwards, 

 the other formed of a reflected lobule of the margin and opening inwards. 



D. pilosiuscula "Willd. Kne-haieed Mountain- Fern. Frond bipinnate ; leaf- 

 lets lanceolate, .sessile; segments pinnatifld, decurrent, oblong-ovate, ultimate 

 segments toothed ; stipe a httle hairy. — A large and delicate fern, in pastures, 

 roadsides, among rocks and stones. Fronds 2 — 3f high, in tufts, and remarkable 

 for their numerous divisions and subdivisions. Stipe and raehis smooth, with the 

 exception of a few, soft, scattered hairs. Leaflets alternate, approximate; seg- 

 ments deeply divided into 4-toothed, ultimate segments. Sori minute, solitary, oa 

 the upper margin of the segments. July. (D. punctUoba Hook.) 



13. WOODWAR'DIA, Sm. (To Thomas J. Woodward, an English 

 botanist.) Sori oblong, straight, parallel with, and close to the midvein, 

 on transverse, anastamosing veinlets; indusia arising from the same 

 veinlet on the outer side, free and opening on the inner side towards 

 the midvein.— Fronds pinnate or pinnatifid. 



1 W. on^oleoides Willd. Fronds of two kinds; the sterile simply pinnatifid 

 pinnae, lanceolate, repand, shghtly serrulate ; fertile fronds pinnate, the pinme 

 entire, linear, acute. — In swamps, not common. Fern about a foot high, growing 

 in tufts. Barren fronds numerous, of a narrow-lanceolate, acuminate outline. 

 Leaflets with decurrent or confluent bases. Fertile fronds fewer, with linear 

 segments nearly covered on the back with the fruit in oblong, longitudinal sori ^' 

 in length. Aug. (W. angustifoUa Sm.) 



2 'W. Virginioa Willd. Pronds all similar, pinnate, very smooth, the leaflets pin- 

 natifid, lanceolate, sessile ; sori in interrupted lines near the midvein of the leaflets 

 and oblong, oblusish segments. — In low woods and swamps. Frond about 2f high, 

 on a smooth stipe, lanceolate in outline, and pale green. Leaflets alternate, deeply 

 pinnatifid, with numerous, spreading, obtuse and slightly crenate lobes. Fruit 

 arranged in lines along each side of the midveins, both of the segments and leaf- 

 lets. July, Aug. (Doodia, E. Br.) 



3 W. thelypteroides Ph. Fronds nearly similar, pinnate, the pinncR sessile, villous 

 at base, linear-lanceolate, pinnatifid ; the segments in the sterile fronds oblong, obtus- 

 ish, in the fertile short-triangular, acute, all entire ; stipe pubescent, angular.— Sandy 

 swamps, near Charleston, S. Car. Resembles, the preceding but is not half its 

 size. Jl. (Pursh.) 



14. ASPLE^NIUffl, L. Spleenwort. (Gr. a, privative, atiXfiv, the 



spleen ; from its supposed medicinal virtues.) Sori linear, or linear- 

 oblong, separate, oblique to the midvein, arising witb its indusium, from 



