22 18, Lycopod. 2. LYCOPODIACEiE. Pl.end.cr. 
2. Lycopodium ahietiforme. Fir wolfs claw. 
Stalk forked, erect ; branches eventopped ; leaves spread, 
in eight series, linear, lanceolate, pointed, not in the least 
nicked, imbricated, ridged. 
Selago foliis et facie abietis, Raii Syn. 106. 
S. vulgaris, Dill. Muse. 435. 
Lycopodium Selago, Lin. S. P. 1565. 
Upright Jirmoss. 
Wet heaths in mountains; perennial; June to August. 
Stalk about 8 in. high, very leafy ; leaves thick, dark 
green, shining; conceptacles small, brownish yellow. 
Violently emetic ; the decoction externally used destroys 
lice in children’s hair. 
b. Lepidotis. Conceptacles in spikes , with bractece. 
3. Lycopodium annotinum. Yearly wolfs claw. 
Stalk creeping ; branches ascending, twice twoparted at 
the base ; leaves in five rows, linear, lanceolate, contracted 
at each year’s growth ; spike solitary, sessile, terminal. 
Lycopodium elatius juniperinum, clavis singularibus, sine pediculis, 
Raii Syn. 107,2; Dill. MAbb. 
Lycopodium annotinum, Lin. S. P. 1566. 
Alpine rocks; perennial; June to August. 
Stem very long ; flowerbearing shoots 2 in. high, gene- 
rally branched, leafy, contracted at the last year’s shoot ; 
leaves expanded, light green ; bractece smaller, closely tiled, 
rather membranaceous, 
4. Lycopodium clavatum . Clubbed ujolfsclaw. 
Stalk creeping; branches ascending; leaves spread, ribless, 
bent inwards, terminating in hairs ; spikes usually in pairs, 
cylindrical, footstalked; bractece ovate, pointed, eroso- 
denticulated. 
Lycopodium, Raii Syn. 107, 1. 
Muscus clavatus seu Lycopodium, Ger. era. 1562 ; Park. 1307. 
Lycopodium vulgare pilosum, amfragosum et repens, Dill. M. 441. 
Lycopodium clavatum, Lin. S. P. 1564. 
Clubmoss. 
Heaths or hills; perennial; July, August. 
Stalks whiplike, several feet long, creeping, branched 
leafy all around ; fruitbearing branches upright, 4 in. high, 
loosely leafed, terminated by 1 to 3 cylindrical, leafy spikes 
an inch long ; bractece broader at the bottom. 
