SELAGINELLAS. 
145 
SELAGINELLAS 
S SERPENS (mutabills and variabilis) X 
S SETOSA 3 
S TRIANGULARIS .... 2 
(LYCOPODIUMS)- continued. 
d. 
6 ^UNCINATA (ctesla) . 
6 -S'WALLICHII 
6 a WILDENOVII (pubescena) 
d. 
6 
6 
6 
Selections of good kinds can be supplied at 18s. per dozen. 
SELAGINELLA CAULESCENS GRACILIS. 
A remarkably neat and pretty Indian Club-moss. It has creeping rhizomes from which the erect 
arching stems spring up ; these are. distantly branched, the branches ovate with about six or seven 
divisions, each of which is three or four times parted. Its bright green colour and elegant dwarf 
growth, combine to give a most pleasing character. 6s. 
SELAGINELLA KRAUSSIANA AUREA. 
This is a bright golden-tinted variety, and has the same free-growing habit as the type, and differs 
from it only in the colour of its leaves, which instead of being green are goldcn-yellow', making the 
plant exoeedingly distinct and ornamental. It has been awarded a First Class Certificate by the 
Floral Committee of the Royal Horticultural Society, and also by the Royal Botanic Society. 2s. 6d. 
SELAGINELLA PERELEGANS (BELLULA). 
An elegant plant from Ceylon, of erect habit, the reddish tinted terete stems rising to about a foot 
in height, with successive branches, which are set on at short distances apart along the stem, the 
ultimate branches terminated by long tetragonal rigid spikes. The larger lateral leaves are close-set, 
oblong, sub-falcate, the smaller ones ovate-acuminate. 3s. 6d, 
SELAGINELLA VICTORIiE. 
An elegant sub-scandent species, introduced from the South Sea Islands. It has a creeping caudex, 
from which at intervals spring up an erect stem, which lengthens by forming ne^f growths at the 
point ; these stems produce alternate lateral branches of an ovate outline, flat and closely pinnate, 
like the frond of a Fern. The colour is a d.ark sap gicen, the spikelets and young growth being of a 
paler and lighter hue. It is allied to S. IVallichii, but is a still more elegant jilant, and diflers 
ossentially in hamng a long terminal pinnnlct to each branch, instead of dimini.shing gradually to the 
"'ll. 3s. 6d. 
