24 PEEKS : BEITISH AND F0EEI6N. 



a few of the more striking of tLese^ together witli 

 the countries ia which they are founds in order to 

 draw the attention of some of our enterprising nursery- 

 men to them and induce them, to take steps for their 

 iatroduction. Assuredly in this fern-loving age 

 many would prove of great commercial value. First, 

 there is the magnificent Matonia pectinata, found 

 only on Mount Ophir, in Malacca j a Pern resemhling 

 the Oleichenias in habit, but rising to a height of five 

 or six feet, with beautiful fronds, divided, like those of 

 &n-palms, into numerous pectinate segments. Two 

 other Perns of much the same habit, the Dipteris 

 Wallichii and D. Horsfieldii, are likewise worthy a place 

 in our gardens. The former of these is found in the 

 mountains of Silhet, and the latter in Java, Borneo, 

 the Philippines, Piji, and neighbouring islands. In 

 the Philippine Islands, where the Fern Flora has about 

 260 representatives, there are numerous fine species, 

 such as Bryostachium s^lendens and Aglaomorpha 

 Meye7iiana, both somewhat resembling Drynaria quer- 

 cifolia in the general aspect and mode of growth of 

 their barren fronds, both having rhizomes equally 

 tenacious of life; Loniagramme pteroides, with large 

 pinnate fronds three feet high, having long linear, 

 lanoeolate articulate pinnae, bearing amorphous sori| 

 Photinopteris Horsfieldii, the ghstening sterile fronds 

 of which are pinnate and between two and three feet 

 high, and have very broad elliptic-lanceolate pinnas, 

 similar to the common laurel, while the fertile ones 

 are very much contracted ; Gleichenia excelsa, a very 

 strong-growmg species with fi:onds five or six feet high, 

 having spreading pinnae two to three feet in length. 

 The beautiful Schizoccena Brunonis of Penang and 



