Supplement.] 233 



Autoicous ; resembling Mollia crispa, but in larger and laxer yellowish- 

 green tufts. Stems branched, or rarely simple, \—\ in. high. Leaves 

 small below, accrescent upward, lanceolate-acuminate, acute, strongly 

 crisped when dry, the margins plane or slightly incurved ; nerve strong, 

 excurrent in a minute apiculus ; cells hyaline, incrassate, minutely papil- 

 lose, elongated at base, roundish quadrate above. Perichsetial bracts 

 resembling the stem-leaves, but broader and longer. Capsule immersed, 

 on a very short seta, fuscous, nearly spherical or oval ; lid very small, 

 indistinctly defined but acutely rostrate ; spores papillose. Male inflorescence 

 gemmiform, close to the perichsetium. 

 Hab. — Chalk downs in S. of England, rare. Fr. 2. 



Between Lewes and Chichester, Sussex; and at Reigate, Surrey (W. E. Nicholson 1900) ! ! 

 Folkestone, Kent (H. N. Dixon). 



Mr. Nicholson kindly sent me the specimen figured, and I can confirm all 

 the remarks in his paper ; the fruit, no doubt, is very infrequent, but this hardly 

 justifies the specific name. I think it will be most convenient to maintain our 

 four British and the foreign Af. Levieri as distinct species, although closely allied. 



MOLLIA (§ Hymenostomum) CRISPATA {Nees Horns:) 



Autoicous ; resembling M. tortilis. Leaves longer, lineal-lanceolate, 

 curled when dry, involute at margin, nerve excurrent in a mucro. Capsule 

 ovato-oblong, often gibbous, lid with a longer beak, peristome rudimentary. 

 (T. CXXVI, E.) 



Syn. — Weissia fallax Sehlmeyer in Flora ii, 639 (1818). Brid. Bry. univ. i, 336 (1826). 



HymeKostomum crispatum Nees Hornsch. Bry. Germ, i, 204, t. 12, fig. 7 (1823). Brid. 

 Biy. univ. ii, 80 (1827). Bryol. Eur. fasc. 33 — 36, p. 6, t. 4 (1846). Schimp. Synops. 

 2 ed. 36 (1876), 



Weissia gymnostomoides Brid. Bry. univ. i, 342 (1826). Hueben. Muse. Germ. 126 (1833). 



Weisia Rudolphiana Hornsch. in Bry. Germ, ii, 2, p. 31, t. 25 (1S31). 



Weisia viridula var. gymnostomoides Bry. Eur. I.e. 



Gymnostomum crispatum Schimp. Synops. 36 (i860) p.p. 



Cymnostomum tortile y alpinum Schimp. Synops. 36 (i860). 



Gymnostomum Schimperi Mol. Moosstud. Alg. alpen 58 (1865). 



Mollia viridula var. y gymnostomoides Lindb. Muse. Scand. 21 (1879). 



Weisia crispata C. Muell. Synops. i, 662 (1849). JuR. Laubm. Oest-Ung. II (1882). 

 LiMPR. in Raben. D. kr. fl. Laubm. i, 254 (1886). Dixon Journ. of Bot. 1899, p. 375. 



Autoicous ; very like M. tortilis, growing in dense yellowish-green 

 tufts. Leaves erecto-patent when moist, curved and hooked when dry, 

 elongated, ovato-lanceolate, suddenly ending in a short point formed by 

 the excurrent nerve, which is brown, and stouter than that of M. tortilis, 

 margins in the upper part strongly involute, and nearly meeting in the 

 middle : cells on both sides with low papillae. Seta yellow, capsule erect 

 ovate or elliptical, sometimes gibbous and cernuous, brownish ; lid with 



