370 50. NOTHOCHLiENA, § EUNOTHOCHLjENA. 



2 lin. br. ; tomentum of the rachis very short, and the pinnce naked. — m. Sp. 5. 

 p. 105. 



Hab. Andes, from New Granada southward to Peru. — Mettenius admits our three 

 varieties as species, and also J. scalarie, Kze., and J. rotwndifolia, F^e, the latter a 

 robust plant, most like y, but with closer and rounder pinnse. 



Gen. 50. NQiH0CHL.a;NA, B. Br. (See page 514.) 



Sori marginal, at first obhjng or roundish, soon confluent into a continuous 

 marginal line, without a distinct involucre, but with the edge of the frond fre- 

 quently inflexed. Veins fre^ in all the species. A small widely-dispersed gernis, 

 differing from, Cheilanthes only by the absence of a distinct involucre, and connected 

 with it by gradual intermediate stages. Tab. 6. /. 50. 



§ Eunothochlsena. Fronds not farinose beneath. Sp. 1-16. 



* Fronds densely matted beneath ; stems robust. Sp. 1-11. 



1. N. Rawsoni, Pappe ; rhieome woody, wide-creeping, the scales dense, ad- 

 pressed, linear, black in the centre and ferruginous towards the edge ; st. 3-4 

 in. 1., wiry, erect, naked, dark chesnut-brown ; fr. 6-9 in. I., ^ in. br., simply 

 pinnate ; pinruB in distant pairs, nearly as broad as long, deeply pinnatifid ; 

 texture subcoriaceous ; upper surface pale-green, naked, lower densely matted 

 with ferruginous tomentum ; sori black, the edge not inflexed. — Hk. Sp. 6. 

 ■p. 110. 



Hab. Namaqna-land, Eev. Mr. Wliitehead. 



2. N. sinuata, Kaulf. ; rJRzome very thick, densely clothed with linear bright 

 ferruginous scales and bearing bulbs ; «J. subtufted, 2-4 in. 1., firm, erect, chesnut- 

 brown, matted •,fr. 1-2 ft. 1., 1-2 in. br., simply pinnate ; pinnai short-stalked, |-1 

 in. 1., J-^in. br., ovate or oblong, varying from entire to deeply pinnatifid ; texture 

 thick, coriaceous ; upper surface green and slightly villose ; lower surface and 

 rachis densely coated with small linear ferruginous scales ; edge slightly inflexed. 

 —Hk. Sp. 5. p. 108. Bot. Mag. t. 4699. 



Hab. New Mexico, along the Andes to Chili. 



3. '^.ferruginea, Hk. ; rhizome thick, bearing bulblike scaly buds, the scales 

 very dense, fibrillose, dark-brown ; St. subtufted, 2-4 in. 1., wiry, erect, black, 

 slightly matted ; fr. 6-12 in. 1., i-1 in. br., simply pinnate ; pinnce sessile, i-^ 

 in. 1., ovate, deeply pinnatifid, with blunt lobes ; texture coriaceous ; upper surface 

 pale-green, villose, lower densely matted with ferruginous or nearly white tomen- 

 tum ; edge inflexed, slightly membranous ; sori black. — Sk. Sp. 5. p. 108. 2nd 

 Cent. t. 62, 



Hab. West Indies and Mexico, along the Andes to Chili. — This and the two preceding 

 may be distinguished from the rest of the group by having even the lower pinnse pinnatifid 

 only. 



4. N. lanuginosa, Desv. ; st. densely tufted, woolly, wiry, very short ; fr. 6-9 

 in. 1., 1-1^ in. br., oblong-lanceolate, bipinnate ; pinnce close, lanceolate, the 

 central ones the largest, with close, roundish or oblong, entire or 3-lobed pinnl. ; 

 texture herbaceous but thick ; both sides, especially the lower one, coated with 

 whitish or subferruginous tomentum ; rachis bright chesnut-brown, more or less 

 woolly.— .HJ. ;S^. 6. i9. 119. 



Hab. South Europe, from Spain to Syria, Greece, Madeira, Teneriffe, Cape Verde 

 Ifles, Algiers, Temperate and Tropical Australia. — Distinguished from the rest by its 

 dense white woolly tomentum. 



