- 31 - 
cultivated. The axillary buds are used the natives for officinal 
purposes. 
Africa to Australia and Poly nesia. 
-f No. 32. Aspidiiiiii .Ueft,, f235).— 
Terrestrial. 
Malaya. 
No. 33. Pol.yflodiiiiii Spec.— 
America. 
A No. 35. viil<*aiiic*iim. Hi., (456).— 
No. 39. Polypoflium liiii&iitiiie. hort.— 
+ No. 40. aiirila, f*r.. (726); Acrostichum 
auritnrn, Siv., öchrad. Journ., 1800^, 12.— Terrestrial. Charac- 
teristic by its contracted fertile fronds with staghorn-like pinnae 
and the sori covering alniost both surfa(;es. 
Malaya^ Salomon Isles. 
-f- No. 41. Pferi^ eii^ifbriiiis var. Vicloi'iae 
(361); Pt. Victoriae, hort.— Terrestrial. A. beautiful plant often 
cultivated and probably a garden variety of the type. 
+ No. 42. PolviMalilllll lialleil^. fil.. (620); P. subauri- 
culaturn, BI., var., C. Chr., Ind. Fil., 567.— Dr. Raciborski esteems 
this a rare, abnormal, suppressed, local derivative of P. subauricu- 
latum. from which it diflers in having the fronds much smaller 
and densely soft-pubescent on both sides. I have seen in state of 
nature numerous full-grown, fruiting specimens of this in one 
and the same locality in the Preanger Regencies. 
Java. 
Section IX. 
-j- No. 1. Cihotiiim baroiiietx. (48,792).— 
-f No. 5. Alsopliila $iaii<*a, ./. var. loiisepa- 
-jm. 
