484 Baker . — A Summary of the new Ferns 
both sides with hair-like paleae like those of the stipe. Veins 
pinnate opposite the lobes. Sori medial, linear, often £ in. 
long. Andes of Quito, Jameson . 
17*. G. Delavayi, Baker, sp. n. Rhizome short-creeping; paleae 
dense, linear, ferruginous. Stipes tufted, wiry, castaneous, 
pilose, 3-4 in. long. Frond oblong-lanceolate, subcoriaceous, 
simply pinnate, 3-4 in. long, 1-1^ in. broad, green and 
nearly naked above, densely clothed beneath with lanceolate 
brown membranous paleae. Pinnae oblong, J-f in. long, 
J in. broad, the lower lobed on one or both sides at the 
base. Sori oblique, quite hidden beneath the paleae. Yunnan, 
Delavay. Near G. Mueller i and veslita. 
21. G. Pozoi, Kunze. I cannot separate specifically G. alpina, 
Potts, in Trans. New Zeal. Instit. X, 361, from the mountains 
of New Zealand. 
22. G. Andersoni, Beddome. As has been already stated Woodsia 
lanosa, Hook., must be placed here as a synonym. 
24*. G. longifolia, Baker, sp. n. Rhizome wiry, short-creeping; 
paleae minute linear-subulate, castaneous. Stipe flexuose, 
wiry, castaneous, naked, 1-4 in. long. Fronds lanceolate, 
bipinnatifid, 4-6 in. long, J-f in. broad: apex indefinite, 
circinate. Pinnae 20-30-jugate, oblong, obtuse, shortly 
petioled, obtusely lobed. Veins flabellate in the lobes. Sori 
oblong. Mountains of Central Brazil, Glaziou , 7017. Very 
near the Andine G. angustifrons , Baker. 
33*. G. vellea, Baker, in Journ. Bot. 1881, 206. New Granada; 
province of Antioquia, alt. 8800 feet, Kalbreyer , 1487. Near 
G. Warcewiczii , Mett. 
35. G. javanica, Blume. Has now been found in West China, 
Madagascar, and East tropical Africa. 
43*. G. Sehafifneri, Baker; Bommeria Schaffneri, Fourn. in Bull. 
Soc. Bot. France, 1880, 327. Mexico, Schaffner. Fournier’s 
genus Bommeria is founded on Gymnogramme pedata , Kaulf. 
44. G. leptophylla, Desv. Has now been found in Madagascar, 
Kumaon, and Paraguay. 
48*. G. schizophylla, Baker, in Journ. Bot. 1877, 266; Hook. Ic. 
t. 1682. Mountains of Jamaica, alt. 4000-5000 feet, first 
found by Miss Taylor. Rediscovered by Jenman and Nock 
in 1875 and introduced into cultivation. 
