- 39 - 
-f No. 17. Itle<‘liilllill oriciilale. !>.. (387). — Terrestrial. 
Common. Often cultivated. 
Tropical Asia, Australia, Polynesia. 
No. 18. l>ic*lyo|)feriNferi*ii&1iica. r..J.r. fl.. (516).— 
No. 20. C)ileic*lieiiia iiiieari^. i'lat'ke* (59); Polypo- 
dium lineare, Burm., Flor Ind., 235.— Terrestrial. Often covering 
large portions of the field, forming dense brush-woods. 
Tropical and extra-tropical. 
H- No. 24. Pol.V|MHliiiiii iiapillo^liill. HL, (600).— Ter- 
restrial and epiphytical. Readily distinguislied by its sori placed 
in deep, saccate depressions of the fronds. 
Malaya. 
-(- No. 26. A^pleiiiiiiii unilaterale. Mjam., (466).— 
No. 27. Lycopodium Spec.— 
4^ No. 30. tlleaiuira eoliibriiia. Copei,, var. Iu*a- 
ehyiMls. (152, 806).— Terrestrial and epiphytical. 
Java, Borneo, Philippines. 
•^4- No. 31. C.vrtoiiiiiim taleatiiiii. Pr.. (253); Polypo- 
dium falcatum, L. f., Suppl., 446; Polystichum falcatiim Biels, 
C. Chr., Ind. Fil., 581.— Terrestrial. Often cultivated. 
Southern Africa, Madagascar, Br. India, Geylon, Malaya, China, 
Japan, Sandwich Islands. 
No. 33. Aerostieliiiiii Spec.— 
No. 34. Pleopelti^ iiiare^eeiis, (665).) 
/ 4- No. 35. ni|)la/Jlllll ef^CllIeilt lllll. ^W,. (425); Hemio- 
nitis esculenta, Retz, Obs., VI, 38. — Terrestrial. Rather large. Widely 
distributed in ; 
Tropical Asia and Polynesia. 
4- No. 36. Naeeoloiiia MU'bitoliiim. Vhi'ist, (282); 
Bicksonia sorhifolia, Sm., Rees, Cycl., VII, ?— A characteristic, 
