APPENDIX. 
305 
gato-crispatum, variegated and curled; variegato- 
cristatum; variegated and created; variegato-pramorsum, 
bitten off; vestitum, clothed ; viviparum, viviparous. 
Polystichum lonchitis (p. 249), confertum, 
crowded; multifidum, many-cleft; proliferum, pro¬ 
liferous. 
Ptekis aquilina (p. 256,) caudata, tailed; dc- 
pauperata, impoverished; erosa, gnawed ; multifida, 
many-cleft; variegata, variegated. 
Scoeopendkium vcegahe (p. 264).—There are very- 
many other trivial variations of form, but which are 
really so transient as scarcely to deserve particu¬ 
larising. Abruptum, fronds blunt; apicilobium, fronds 
broadest above ; bi-margmatum, with the membrane 
beneath the fronds excurrent, with cup-shaped ex¬ 
crescences on the upper surface ; chelafrons, fronds bi¬ 
furcate at top ; compositum, fronds undulately crisped 
at the top and bottom, but marginate and toothed in 
the middle; crenato-lobatum, upper part of fronds 
crenato-lobate ; coriaceum, very thick and dentate; 
crista-galli, thickly crested at top ; cristatum, tasselled 
beads rather larger than in digitatum, which is also 
thickly crisped; Jissum, margin deeply cut and 
toothed; Jimbriatum, deeply lobed, and the lobes 
frilled; flabellatum, deeply forked and fan-shaped at 
top; glomeratum, a crisped mass from repeated 
forking; ineequale, differing from obluxi-dcntalum 
chiefly in having a broader lobe or branch irregularly 
placed; inops, dichotomously divided ; irregulare, 
x 
