The Scottish Naturalist. 259 



on there is this remark : " If C. binervis, it is a very strange form ; 

 I doubt it. R. G." This, I suppose, would be either Dr. Greville's 

 or Prof. Graham's remark. There is no further locality than " Clova 

 Mountains, Com. Wright, 1834." This would probably mean For- 

 farshire, though at that time the Aberdeenshire side of the watershed 

 might have been included. 



0. laevigata 73 ! C. sylvatica 10 1. 



C. vaginata 94 ! C. glauca 75 Dmce. 



0. capillaris 97. 



C. limosa seg. 96 ! 97 I 102 ! 75 Dr. A. Boyd ! 



C. praecox 99. 



(J. pilulifera 74. 94. 



C. lagopina 90. P. Ewing, " Canlochan Glen, at 2700 feet, with C. 



vaginata " 96 ! 



C. hirta 98. 



C. paludosa 73 ! 74 ! 86 ! 



C. riparia 73 ! 99. 



G. vesicaria 95 "Herb. Oxon/'^Ve Dmce. 



C. caespitosa L. (Fr.) 112 ! New to British Flora, common in 



Sweden, where it is called " Stav- 



grass." 

 (J. pelia F. O. Lang 108 ! 

 Anthoxanthum Puellii 73 t ! 



A. Puellii var. nana Lloyd. 92 fide Townsend in J.B., 



1875, p. 4. 

 Phalaris arundinacea 103 ! 

 Phleum alpinum 94 ! 96 ! confirmed. 



P. pratense 74. 98. 

 Alopecurus alpinus 94 ! 



A. agrestis 72 ! 109. 

 Milium effusum 75. 99. 

 Agrostis canina 96. 104. 



A. nigra 88 ! Rev. E. S. Marshall. 

 Calamagrostis Strigosa. Found in a second Caithness station by Messrs. 



Grant & Hanbury, in 1887 ! 

 Phragmites communis 98. 

 Aira uliginosa 112! 

 A. flexuosa 107. 

 A. alpina 103. 

 A. caryophyllea 98. 

 A. praecox 99. 



