THE HIGH ALPINE FLORA OF BRITAIN 231 



112. Luzula campestris, Cand., var. multiflora, Brand in 

 Koch, "Syn. deutsch. schweiz. Fl." Aufl. 3, p. 2514 (Liefg. 16). 



Syn. Juncus mulfiflorus, Ehrhart, "Calam." n. 127, ex Hoffm., 



"Fl. Deutschl." i. 169 ( 1 800) ;/ erectus, Pers., "Syn. Plant." 



i. 386 (1805) ; Luzula multiflora, Lejeune, " Fl. Spa," i. 169 (181 1) ; 



Juncus intermedius, (non Host) Thuill., " Fl. env. Paris," ed. 2, i. 



178 (I799)- 



Ascends to 1020 m. on the mountains of the Breadalbane 

 district (" Fl. Perthsh." 301). 



113. Luzula Sudetica, Cand. (1815). Head of Glen Callater, 

 in Aberdeenshire (Syme). Alpine situations in the Breadalbane 

 district (White). Of Syme's three varieties of L. multiflora, 

 continental botanists place a and ft under L. campestris, and keep 

 up y as the present plant. 



Fam. 29. POTAMOGETONACE^:. 



114. Potamogeton alpinus, Balbis. Ascends to 1020 m. in the 

 Scottish Highlands (Ar. Bennett ex "Journ. Bot." 1907, 374). 



Fam. 30. CYPERACE^:. 



115. Eriophorum angustifolium, Roth. Ascends to about 1000 

 m. on the mountains of Breadalbane district ("Fl. Perthsh." 319). 

 Ascends to noo m. on Sgorr-an-Dubh, on the west side of Glen 

 Eunach (Prof. J. Trail, 1902). 



1 1 6. Carex leporina, L. North corrie of Loch-na-gar, at 1005 

 m., 1906 (Watson, "Bot. Exch. Club Kept." ii. 116 [1907] ; Dickie, 

 66). ' 



117. Carex Lachenalii, Schkuhr. In the northern corrie of 

 Loch-na-gar, at 1005 m. (E. S. Marshall and W. A. Shoolbred in 

 "Journ. Bot." 1907, 295). Discovered on rocks in Loch-na-gar . . . 

 1836, by Mr. Dickie and Mr. Clark " (" Engl. Bot. suppl." 2815 

 [1838]). It was found on the south-west corner of the table-top 

 at about 1070 m. Syme ("Engl. Botany," x. 100) "found it 

 [C. lagopind\ in 1851 plentifully by the side of a small loch on 

 the north side of the hill, the name of the loch being, I believe, 

 Loch-an-ean." 



1 1 8. Carex canescens, Lightf. Ascends to 1037 m - on tne 

 mountains of the Breadalbane district (G. C. Druce in " Ann. Scot. 

 Nat. Hist." 1900, 231); and to noo m. in Ross-shire (var. fallax, 

 Asch. and Graebn.). See notes on this sedge in " Journ. Bot." 1 908, 

 369. Lightfoot's " Fl. Scotica " is the correct authority. 



119. Carex echinata, Murray (1770). Summit of Beenkeragh 

 (Hart in " Cyb. Hib." ed. 2, 397). 



