- cirrhate when dry, nerve thinly lamellate; caps. obovate-oblong,
sub-cernuous, lid with a long beak; per. teeth large. [Bry. Eur. IV., 412. Syn. 435.]
Bare moist sandy places, and dried-up pools. Autumn.
Loch Goil Head; Killin, Perthshire.
273. A. crispum. James. (laxifolium, Wils. MS.) St. simple, slender; l. lower small somewhat spathulate; upper much larger oblong-lanceolate, slightly undulate, border thickened, toothed; nerve reaching apex, scarcely lamellate; areolæ larger, hexagonal or rounded; caps. obovate-oblong, sub-erect or inclined, wide-mouthed, teeth very short irregular, seta red. [Dr. Braithwaite, Jour. Bot., VIII., 225.]
Lancashire; Oakmere, Cheshire; Saddleworth, Yorkshire; Dartmoor. Male plant only found in Britain.
43. OLIGTRICHUM. De C.
274. O. hercynicum. De C. St. ½-1in; l. rigid erecto-patent, lanceolate, sheathing, margins indexed, lamellæ of nerve undulate, and spinulose at back; caps. erect cylindrical, plicate and oblique when dry; lid conical pointed.
Alpine and sub-alpine barren soil. VI. VII.
Scotland; Todmorden (Nowell).
44. POGONATUM. P. Beauv.
275. P. nanum. Brid. St. short, not branched at apex; l. rigid spreading, lanceolate-obtuse, sheathing, serrulate above; caps. almost globose, erect or inclined, lid with a curved or oblique beak; columella not winged.
Moist shady sandy banks. X. XI.
var. β. longisetum. l. long, linear-lanceolate, seta very
long; caps. oval-oblong.