Musct Exorici.—Afenziesiani. 
JUNGERMANNIA GLAUCESCENS. 
JSungermannia caule erecto, foliis bifariis horizontalibus 
inequaliter bilobis pubeseentibus, lobis conduplicatis 
Ovatis, stipulis quadrifidis, calyce terminali foliaceo. 
(Tas. XX XIX.) 
Has. In sinu Dusky Bay dicto, in Nova Zeelandia, D, Menzies, 
1791. 
Caulis 3-4-uncialis, erectus, flexuosus, dichotome divisus. Fo- 
lia bifaria, disticha, horizontalia, glauco-viridia, reticulata, pu- 
bescentia, biloba, lobis inequalibus, conduplicatis, anteriori- 
bus minoribus ovatis, posterioribus longioribus, magis angustis, 
Stipule subquadrate, quadrifides, pubescentes. Fructus ter- 
_minalis, Calyx foliis obsitus, elongato-cylindracea, carnosa, 
Seta bipollicaris, alba, Capsula quadrifida, segmentis lmeae 
ribus. 
There are several European species of Jungermannia (such as 
J. nemorosa, J. undulata, &c.), with a habit similar to the one 
here figured, and with leaves of a like form; but none, that I am 
yet acquainted with, which has the stipules placed on the same 
side of the stems with the larger lobes of the leaf. In this par~ 
ticular our plant differs most remarkably from J. domentedla, with 
which at first sight it may appear allied, and naturally ranks with 
J. appendiculata and J. nobilis of the Musct Exotici, It is 
remarkable in its leaf-bearing calyx (such as is seen in J. com= 
pressa and a few other British species), and in its pubescent fo- 
liage and stipules, 
Fig. 1, plant nat. size. Fig. 2, portion of a stem with the ca< 
lyx, Fig, 3, leaf and stipule. Fig. 4, calyx dissected. Fig. 5, 
capsules, —magn, 
