— 35 — 
-|- No. 27. C'.vc*l<»|iliorii^ Spec.— 
+ No. 28. l*leriüi loii&iroliii. #>.. var. «liveiNilolia. 
(356); Pt. diversifolia, Sw., Syn., 96, 288.— Terrestrial, not rarely 
also growing on stone walls. Very common. 
Widely distributed all round the ivorld. 
-f- No. 30. ni|ila/jiiiii a!^|>eriiiii. (420).— 
No. 31. \e|»lirole|M^ exaltala. ^ehoti. (161). — 
Section XI. 
^ No. 1. lioxos'raiiime iiivoluta. f*#*.. (537)|; 
involuta, Pon, Procl. Flor. Nepal., 14; Polypodmm scolopendrinum, 
C. Chr., Incl. Fil., 562. — Epiphytical. 
China, Tropical Asia, Melanesia. 
No. 2. C\vC‘lo|iliorim Spec.— 
+ No. 4. ■•leriiü serriilafa. f>. (361); Pt. multifida, 
Poir., C. Chr., Incl. Fil, 602. — Terrestrial. A. small specimen. In 
cultivation. 
China, Japan. 
+ No. 5. Vepliroleins llilrtl. ( 159). — Terrestrial. 
Probably a garden variety or a monstriious derivative of another 
species, obtained by cultivation. The numeroiis specimens which 
I have seen in different gardens or as ornamental plants in rooms 
we re all sterile. 
Malaya, Northern Australia. 
+ No. 7. Havallia liir!«iifa. i\ A. i\ ii.. (29^); Leucoste- 
gia hirsuta, J. Syn., Journ. of Bot., III, 416 ; Microlepia hirsuta, Pr., 
C. Chr., Ind. Fil., 426. — Terrestrial or epiphytical. Rhizome wide- 
creeping, intertwined. Copeland foimded on this and 2 other 
closely allied species his genus Paoallodes, different from Davallia 
by its rhizome clothed with stiff', bristly hairs with small peltate 
bases. If he is correct in this, Davallia triphylla, Hk. and penta- 
phylla, BI., having nearly ciuite the same scales absolutely different 
«L 
