MAoouN.] CATALOGUE OF CANADIAN PLANTS. 53 



<198.) B. subgracilis, C. M. &Kmdb. (n. sp.) 



Densely tufted. Plants small, about 0.6 cm. high, green above, red- 

 brown below, nearly simple. Leaves when dry subcrispate, when 

 moistened squan-ose, curved from the ovate base, narrow, long-subulate, 

 nearly smooth ; borders reflexed nearly all around ; lower basal cells 

 rectangular, more pellucid than the other ; costa reddish, perciirrent 

 or short-excurrent. Inner perichetial leaves broad, blunt with a long- 

 ■excurrent costa, the other acuminate, all faintly crenulate. Capsule 

 oblong-cylindric, red-brown, longer than the subulate oblique beak ; 

 pedicel red. Dioecious, Allied to Barbula gracilis. 



On rocks at Yale, B.C., May l*7th, 1889. (Macoun.) 



(199.) B. subicmadophila, C. M. & Kindb. (n. sp.) 



B. gracilis, var. squarrvlosa, Kindb., Bull. Torr. Bot. Club, Vol. XVII. 89. 



Laxly tufted. Plants about 1 cm. high, pale brown, nearly simple. 

 Leaves when dry loosely appressed, when moistened subquarrose or 

 patent, nearly straight, short, ovate-lanceolate acute, faintly papillose ; 

 boi'ders slightly reflexed at the base, inflexed at the upper part, 

 papillose-crenulate ; cells nearly uniform, roundish or subquadrate, 

 the apical often larger and pellucid ; costa pale, pex-current. Periche- 

 tial leaves from a short ovate base long-acuminate sublinear ; costa 

 dark-brown, long-excurrent, filling neai-ly the whole acumen. Capsule 

 ■oblong-cylindric, finally blackish ; pedicel dark-brown. Dioecious. 



Habit of Barbula fallax or B. gracilis, but differing at once in the 

 leaf-borders being, scarcely reflexed. In the European Barbula 

 icmadophila, Bryol., Europ., the leaves are smooth, and the upper 

 furnished with a long-excurrent costa. 



On dry rocks, but which are covered at high water, at Yale, B.C., 

 May 17th, 1875. (Macoun,') 



{200.) B. fallax, Hedw. ; Lesq. & James, Mosses of N. America,' 121. 



Tortvla fallax, Drumm. Muse. Bor.-Am. No. 139. 

 Bicranum pelluddum, Drumm. Muse. Bor.-Am., No. 108. 



Banks of rivers near the Eocky' Mountains ; apparently rare. 

 Eocks of Portage Eiver near the Columbia Eiver. (Drummond.') 

 Bass Eiver, Kent Co., N.B. (Fowler's Cat.) On earth at Owen Sound, 

 Ont., 1874; on earth at the base of trees, Comox, Vancouver Island ; 

 on sand along Ste. Anne des Monts Eiver, Gasp^, Que. (Macoun.) 

 Jakobshavn, Greenland. (B. Brown.) 



