q Southern India, tab. 181. 
=“ 
11 
39, AsPLENIUM LACINIATUM, Don.—North India, South India, (Vizagapatam hills and Ganjam). Ferns Southern India 
tab, 145. 
33, AspLenruM Ruta-murarta, Z.—North India. Ferns British India, tab. 61. 
34. ASPLENIUM ADIANTUM-NIGRUM, Z.—North India. ferns British India, tad. 62. 
35. AsPLENIUM FuRcATOM, Thunb.—General. Ferns Southern India, tab. 144. | 
36. ASPLENIUM AFFINE, Sw.——Ceylon and Malay Peninsula. Ferns Southern India, tab, 226. (spathulinum), 
37, ASPLENIUM NITIDUM, Sw.—General. Ferns Southern India, tabs. 148 & 149. | 
998. ASPLENIUM LASERPITIIFOLIUM, Lam.—North India, Ceylon and Malay Peninsula. (The last 3 are all very closely allied.) 
39. ASPLENIUM FONTANUM, Bernh.—North pei Ferns British India, tab. 146. 
40, ASPLENIUM FONTANUM, var. @ exiguum, Bedd.—South India, Ferns Southern India tab. 146. 
41. AspLuntum vARrtans, Hook & Grev.—General. Ferns Southern India, tab. 129. (This is probably only a tropical 
form of lanceolatum, Huds., as Major Henderson has found on the Nilgiris plants of what appear to be quite the European lanceolatum 
growing with it, so if varians is not included under it, lanceolatum must be added as an Indian species). | 
43, ASPLENIUM BULBIFERUM, Forst.—North India, Penang. Serns British India, tab. 60. 
43, ASPLENIUM TENUIFOLIUM, Don.—General. erns Southern India, tab. 130. 
44, ASPLENIUM RUT@FoLIuM, Aze.—North India, Ceylon. ferns Southern India, tab.138. (prolongatum). 
45. AspLuntium Berancert, Kze.—Birma. Ferns British India, tab. 287. (Baker admits Jussiev’s genus Darea as a sub- 
genus for these 2 last and other species growing beyond our limits. Asplenium Wightianum has occasionally dareoid fronds very like 
those of flaccida, an Australian species of Darea), 
GENUS 39. ATHYRIUM. Roru. 
4. ATHYRIUM SUBTRIANGULARE, Hk.—North India. Ferns British India, tab, 242. 
2. AtHyriuM ATKINSONI, Bedd.—Stipes 6-12 inches long erect straw colored furnished towards the’ base with a few long 
narrow pale colored scales, frond 19-12 inches long triangular, 10-12 in-broad at its basal pinnee, gradually narrowing upwards tri- 
pinnate with the tertiary pinne deeply pinnatifid, pinnee 7-8 on each side, the lowest much the largest 6 inches long by 3 broad, tex- 
ture herbaceous naked, secondary pinne with the rachis winged, but the pinnules (tertiary pinnz) often distinctly petioled at least in 
the lower portion of the pinnz (more so than shown in figure) pinnatifid 4-2rds of the way down the segments being more or less cre- 
nated, sori one to each segment on the basal vein asplenioid, athyrioid or often almost lastreoid, never double, veins terminating just 
within the margin.— Sikkim, high level, collected by the late Mr. Atkinson, it will stand in the Synopsis between crenatum and sub- 
triavgulare, it differs from crenatum to which I was at first inclined to refer it in its fewer pinnee and pinnules and in its sori.—Serns 
British India, tab. 359. ff | 7 ' : 
3, Atuyrtum Honsnackertanum, Kze——South India, Ferns Southern India, tab. 150. 
4, AvHyRIuM FALCATUM, Bedd.—South India, North India. (Athyrium drepanophyllum, Syn. 42. 2nd edit., p. 226.) Ferns 
5. ATHYRIUM THELYPTEROIDES, Miche.—North India. Ferns British India, tab. 68. 
6. ATHYRIUM ALLANTODIOIDES, Bedd.—North India. ferns British India, tab. 221. 
7, AvTHyRium MACcRocARPUM, Bl.—General, Ferns Southern India, tabs. 152 & 153, (Lastrea sparsa, var. membranacea 
Arnt., Syn. Fil. 2d edit, p. 498, : 
8, Aruyrium nigripes, Bl.—South India, North India, Ceylon. Ferns Southern India, tab. 157. (The South Indian and 
Himalayan forms are somewhat distinct and perhaps different species, the former only is figured). 
9, AtTuyriom CrarKEr, Bedd.—Stipe 3-9 inches long straw-colored naked or with a few seales towards the base, frond 
- linear lanceolate 14-24 feet long by 2-34 inches broad gradually acuminated at the apex avd narrowed at the base with numerous pin- 
nee on each side, pinnze (the lower 3-4 pair dwarfed) sub opposite or alternate, cut down to a winged rachis into numerous pinnules, tex- 
‘ture herbaceous, (as in macrocarpum) rachis of the pinne channelled above and furnished with a few weak:-setz on itsraised margins 
naked below, pinnules 3-4 lines long cut down 3rd to 4 way into oblong somewhat falcate crenated segments, costa arid veins of the 
segments sometimes furnished with a few weak setzo on the upper side, sori numerous, straight, curved, or hippocrepiform, rarely 
double (diplazioid) involucre persistent. , ‘ 
