208 TRANSACTIONS, NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY OF GLASGOW. 



only species. It must be to its extensive and varied 

 seaboard that Wigtownshire must depend for its 

 list of plants. 



In addition to the plants new to Wigtownshire 

 from Portpatrick, as given in my former paper, I 

 now add the following from the neighbourhood of 

 Port- William, also new records for the county: 



(1) Carex punctata, at Craigs of Garchew. The 

 only other Scottish station I know for this sedge is 

 in Colvend, Kirkcudbrightshire. 



(2) Carex paludosa, at Monreith Lake, where also 

 grow in abundance Lycopus europaius, Scirpus 

 lacustris, etc. 



(3) Sagina apetala, on the roadsides about Port- 

 William. 



(4) Astragalus glycyphyllos, about four miles north 

 of Port-William. 



(5) Cheer ophyllum temulentum, east of Port- William. 



(6) Lysimachia vulgaris, at Mochrum Loch. 



(7) Typha latifolla, at Monreith Lake. 



(8) Scolopendrium vulgare, about Monreith. 



(9) Ammophila arenaria, and along with it Carex 

 <arenaria, north of Port- William. 



(10) Blysmus rufus, in several places along the 

 rshore. 



Along the shore, north of Port-William, I gathered 

 such plants as Torilis nodosa; Senebiera Coronopus : 

 Malva moschata; prostrate, dwarf, condensed forms 

 of Vicia sylvatica and Prunus spinosa ; Carduus 

 tenuiflorus ; Glaucium luteum; Juncus Gerardi: J. 

 maritimus ; Euphorbia paralias, which I also found, 

 in 1886, at Morroch Bay, south of Portpatrick; 

 Scutellaria minor and Hypericum elodes, found in 

 damp places between Glenluce and Port-William ; 

 Fumaria Borcei : Cakile maritima : (Enanthe Lachenalii : 

 Mertensia maritima: Beta maritima : and Asplenium 

 marinum at Craigs of Garchew. North of Port- 

 William I noticed a field almost covered with Daucus 

 Cai'ota, and another Held had an abundance of 

 Lycopsis arvensis. South of Port-William grow 



