Page:The Botany of the Antarctic Voyage.djvu/427

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Falklands, etc.]
FLORA ANTARCTICA.
391

7. Hymenophyllum secundum, Hook, et Grev., Ic. Fil. t. 133. Hook. Sjo.FiL vol.i. p. 100.

Hab. Staten Land, Menzies ; Hermite Island, Cape Horn, /. B. II. Decidedly the most Antarctic of Ferns, occurring only at the very extremity of the American continent, where it is tolerably abundant in the woods.

8. Hymenophyllum rarum, Brown, Prod/-, p. 159. Ft. Antarct. p. 105. H. semibivalve, Hook, et Grev. Ic. Fil. t. 83.

Var. /3. Hook. Sp. Fil. I. c. H. imbricatum, Colenso, in Tasm. Phil. Journ. vol. ii. p. 187.

Hab. Var. /3. South part of Tierra del Fuego, C. Darwin, Esq.; Hermite Island, Cape Horn, J. B. H.

A species exhibiting a singular predilection for those insidar and peninsular localities, which terminate the continents in the Southern Ocean. Thus it occurs only at the very southern extremity of America and Africa; at Ceylon, which is nearly the southernmost land of the vast Indian empire ; in Tasmania, which is an analogous position in Australasia ; and in New Zealand and Lord Auckland's group, which bear the same geographical relation to Polynesia. As it also inhabits Bourbon and the Mauritius, it appears to exist all round the world, resting on the highest southern lands of each longitude.

2. TRICHOMANES, 8m.

1. Trichomaves Jtabellafum, Bory, in Buperrey Yoy. Bot. Crypt, p. 281. Hook. Sp. Fit. vol. i. p. 119.

T. flabellula, B'Urv. in Mem. Soc. Binn. Paris, vol. iv. p. 597. Hab. Falkland Islands; Gandichaud, D'Urville. A plant which I have never seen, though I diligently sought for it in the Falkland Islands. It is remarkable that both the French Naturalists who met with it, should have faded to notice the Hymenophyllum Wihoni, which is sufficiently abundant, and generally accompanies the following species.

2. Trichomanes caspitosum, Hook., Sp. Fil. vol. i. p. 132. t. 40 B. Hymenophyllum caespitosuin, Gaud, in Ann. Sc. Nat. vol. v. p. 908, et in Freyc. Toy. Bot. p. 374. t. 5. f. 2. B'Urv. in Mem. Soc. Linn. Paris, vol. iv. p. 597.

Hab. Southern parts of Fuegia ; Staten Land, Menzies ; Hermite Island, Cape Horn, abundant on trunks of trees, /. B. H. ; Falkland Islands, clothing the quartz rocks on the hills ; Gaudichaud, B' Urville, J~B. H.

This singular little species was discovered by the lamented Menzies, in Staten Land. Cape Horn is its southern limit, and Chiloe its northern. It has been probably overlooked in the intervening latitudes.

3. CISTOPTERIS, Bern/i.

1. Cistopteris fragilis, Bernh., Neu Journ. Bot. vol. ii. p. 27. Engl. Bot. t. 1587. Hook. Sp. Fil. vol.i. p. 197.

Hab. Strait of Magalliaens ; Port Famine, Capt.King; Falkland Islauds (West Island?), Capt.Sulivan.

One of the most extensively diffused of all vegetables, or even Ferns, though avoiding such hot and equable climates as the low lands of the Tropics. In America, it ranges along the Cordillera, from the Arctic Sea and Greenland to the Strait of Magalhaens; in Europe, from Iceland and Lapland to the Mediterranean ; in Asia, between Kamtschatka and the Himalaya Mountains ; but in Africa it is confined to the Canary Islands and the Cape