172 ANNALS OF SCOTTISH NATURAL HISTORY 



OXYRIA DIGYNA, Hill, At sea-level, Sligachan, 104. 

 URTICA DIOICA, L. At 2900 feet on Stuich-an-Lochan, 88. 

 J-ULMUS GLABER, Mill. Callander, 87 ; probably planted. 

 fFAGUS SYLVATICA, L. Selkirk, 79. 

 BETULA ALBA, L. Sligachan, 104. 



fPoPULUS MAJOR, Mill, (P. canescens, Sm.). Selkirk, but doubtless 



planted, 79. 

 fP. EU-NIGRA, L. Selkirk. 



|P. DELTOIDES, Marsh. Kirkcudbright, 73; Selkirk, 79; Peebles, 

 78 ; Melrose, Roxburgh, So ; Callander, 87 ; planted of course. 



fSALix FRAGILIS, Z. Sligachan, doubtless planted, 104. 

 JUNIPERUS SIBIRICA, Burgs. Near sea-level, Sligachan, 104. 

 LISTERA CORDATA, Br. Kyle Akin, 104, Lawson MS. 



ORCHIS MACULATA, L. Type, Selkirk, Kirkcudbright, and on Ben 

 Lawers, also a form with nearly undivided labellum, with 

 broader and blunter leaves. 



var. PR/ECOX, Webster (O. ericetorum, Linton). St. Mary's 

 Loch, 79; Lawers, 88; Sligachan, 104; and also with pure 

 white flowers ; intermediate forms between pracox and type 

 occur. 



O. MACULATA x HABENARiA GYMNADENIA. One specimen as found 

 at Lawers, growing with both parents. The spur was shorter 

 than in Gymnadenia ; but the lateral petals were broader and 

 were, with the labellum, covered with darker markings. The 

 leaves were narrow and the outline of the spike less cylindric 

 than in Gymnadenia, the flowers were also fainter in odour. 



*O. LATIFOLIA x MACULATA, var. pR,*:cox. Sconser, Skye, with 

 both parents, a rich-coloured and handsome plant, the flowers 

 larger and distinctly suggesting the influence of maculata, and 

 vegetatively much more luxuriant. 



O. MACULATA, L., var. KELLYI, Druce. To this must be referred, I 

 think, the Inchnadamph plant gathered by the Rev. E. S. 

 Marshall. This year I have had the opportunity of seeing it 

 in the fresh state from N. Sutherland. This, too, is the opinion 

 of Mrs. Davy, who made a most beautiful painting of the Irish 

 form. The Scottish plant, like the Irish, is occasionally tinged 

 with pink. Doubtless it is the limestone analogue to the plant 

 of the peat named var. prcecox by Webster ; the type maculata 

 being essentially the plant of argillaceous soils. 



O. MASCULA, L. St. Mary's Isle, 73. 



HABENARIA ALBIDA, Br. Sconser, Skye, 104; lacking personal 

 authority in " Top. Bot." 



