HEPATIC.^:. 
621 
(Sub-tribe VI. — Epigonianthe^.) 
LOPHOCOLEA Dum. 
i^Jungermania Hook.). 
I. Lophocolea cuspidata Limp. 
Moist shady banks in gills and woods, &c., not 
infrequent. 
Coneysthorpe bank wood near Castle Howard, Little 
Beck, and in Arncliff wood, Eskdale near Whitby, Ash 
Hagg- Gill near Hackness, Scarbro' (M.B.S., 1884). 
Fruiting Spring and Summer. 
2. Lophocolea bidentata (L.) Dum. 
{Jmig. hidentafa Hook.). 
Moist and shady situations, on hedge banks, particularly 
amongst moss, and about the base of trees, abundant both 
in the central v^le and in the dales amongst the hills. 
Plentiful in Teesdale, and in many of the Castle Howard 
woods (Spruce). 
Rocks near Gormire and near Thirsk, also by banks of 
Swale (Baker). 
In Cleveland (Mudd). 
Eskdale and in the Whitb}' district, common (Anderson). 
Troutsdale, and by Goathland Beck (M.B.S.). 
South Cliff, Scarbro' (J. A. Wheldon). 
Var. alata Nees. 
On Kirkham hill (Spruce 1847), and Stockton forest, 
near York, rare. 
Fruiting Winter and Spring. 
3. Lophocolea heterophylla (Schrad.) Dum. 
(Jiiuo: hctcropJiylla Hook.) 
Moist places, on trunks of trees, and on decaying- 
wood, abundant mostly in the low country. 
January, 1906. 
