BRITISH J UNGERM ANNIiE. 
( J . anomala.) 
not discoverable without considerable difficulty, and in J. anomala they altogether escaped my 
notice till within these few days. They are most readily seen towards the extremity of the plant, 
all the rest of the under side of the stem being so much covered by the roots : though they there 
exist also. 
The principal difference, therefore, between J. anomala and J. Taylori, consists in the presence 
of the ovate and acute leaves of the former, which are wholly wanting in the latter : other marks, 
though much less to be depended upon, may be found in the densely-crowded patches in which 
I have always seen J. Taylori grow, so that the individuals are forced into a nearly erect 
position j and in its color, which, in all the specimens that have fallen under my observation, has 
been far deeper, and generally with a purple tinge throughout. The fructification of tins plant, 
which alone could remove all doubt respecting the specific difference of these individuals, has, 
unfortunately, not yet been discovered. 
REFERENCES TO THE PLATE. 
TIG. 
1. J. anomala, gemmiferous plant, natural size. 
2. The same, magnified, 6 
3. Barren plant, natural size. 
4. Portion of the same, magnified 6 
5. J. anomala, with orbicular leaves throughout, and innovations, natural size. 
6. The same, magnified 6 
7 and 8. The same, with the leaves erect, natural size and magnified 6‘ 
9. A more common appearance of the plant, natural size. 
10. The same, mhgnified 6 
11, 12, 13, and 14. Various leaves, magnified 3 
