TRICHOMANES. 



373 



segments (Fig. 105, reduced from Col. Beddome's " Ferns of British India," 

 by the kind permission of the author). They are of a very transparent 

 nature. — Hooker, Species Filicum, L, p. 118, t. 39a. Nicholson, Dictionary of 

 Gardening, iv., p. 81. Beddome, Ferns of British India, t. 179. 



T. peltatum— pel-ta'-tum (peltate), 

 Baker. 



A very curious species, of small 

 dimensions, discovered in Samoa (where 

 it clothes the branches of trees) by 

 the Rev. T. Powell, who states that 

 it is quite peculiar in habit. " The 

 different branches of the caudex," 

 writes the discoverer, " run upwards, 

 but so closely together that the margins 

 of the fronds overlap each other. The 

 fronds all lie flat upon the tree, so that the whole Fern has much the 

 appearance of a delicate foliaceous lichen or frondose Jungermannia." — Hooker, 

 Synopsis Filicum, p. 73. 



T. Petersii — Pe-ters'-i-i (Peters'), Asa Gray. 



According to Eaton, this tiny plant is found growing in broad patches 

 in the shade on sand rocks kept constantly moist by the running water 

 near the Sipsey River, in Winston County, Alabama, where it was first 

 discovered by the Hon. Thomas Minott Peters in January, 1853, and in 

 other neighbouring places, but always near running water. Its fronds, 

 produced from a thread-like rhizome, are seldom more than Jin. long and 

 vary in shape from linear to spoon- shaped ; they are sometimes entire and 

 sometimes notched or slightly lobed. — Hooker, Icones Plantarum, t. 986. 

 Nicholson, Dictionary of Gardening, iv., p. 81. Hooker, Second Century of 

 Ferns, t. 86. Eaton, Ferns of North America, t. 24, fig. 2. 



T. pinnatifidum — pin-na-tif'-id-um (pinnatifid), Van den Bosch. 



A species of medium dimensions, native of Jamaica, with fronds 2in. to 

 4in. long, borne on slender stalks lin. to 2in. long and winged above. These 



