477 
(15) 
at the apex of the stems; stem leaves short, 3-5 mm. long, 
slightly falcate at the tips of the branches, tubular with incurved, 
entire margins ; vein more than one-third of the width of the base 
of leaf excurrent with a few teeth at apex; basal cells thin, hyaline 
to the vein, not colored. 
Plants sterile and much less rigid than is usual in this genus; 
their alliance was not indicated nor determined. 
Campylopas sp. undetermined. Yungas, 6000 ft. (3116). 
Plants fragmentary and broken. Stems 2-3 cm. high, prolifer¬ 
ous with fasciculate branches at apex, branches often 15 mm. long 
with the leaves crowded at the summit; leaves curled and twisted 
when dry, 3-5 mm. long, blade narrow, forming a serrate border 
of one row of cells almost to the apex ; vein papillose on the back ; 
cells enlarged at base, brown at angles; leaves of the branches 
shorter, often entire, and radiculose at base, perichetial leaves very 
long pointed, costate, entire, or scarcely serrulate; cells much en¬ 
larged at base, brown, upper oblong; antheridia in heads matted 
with brown radicles; pedicels several in the same head, 8-10 mm. 
long, curved, becoming erect where dry; capsules. 1.5 mm. long, 
ovoid, not ribbed when dry; peristome red, lid not seen. 
These specimens are closely allied to C. annotinus Mitt., and 
C. brachyphyllus Mitt., and C. multicapsularis Sch., from all of 
which they differ in the leaves and the smooth walls of the cap¬ 
sules when dry. 
Grimmia nano-globosa C. M. n. sp. Mapiri, 5000 ft. (3195). 
Plants pulvinate in gray cushions, stems 5-8 mm. high; leaves 
crowded with a long, rough, white hair-point, blade carinate, cells 
small, almost quadrate, sinuous, basal ones elongated. Dioe¬ 
cious (?). Perichetial leaves with a long sheathing base, the white 
tip reaching the lid of the capsule. Pedicel erect, straight, 3-4 mm. 
long; calyptra lobate-mitrate, capsules I—1.5 mm. long, lid with a 
straight beak, .5 mm. long ; annulus narrow, of several single 
rows of cells falling in fragments with the lid; peristome red; 
teeth short, papillose; spores smooth, .008-.010 mm. 
A smaller species than either G. ovata Web. & M., or G. longi- 
rostris Hook. 
Compared at Kew with Matthews’ Peruvian specimens labelled 
G. ovata and illustrated by W. Wilson. The Bolivian specimens 
are smaller. 
Grimmia [Racomitriunt) crispipila (Taylor) Mitt. Sorata, 10000 
ft. (3117)- 
Agrees with specimens at Kew collected by Pearce at Undu- 
