76 



DESCRIPTIONS OF THE GROUPS OF BIRDS 



Ribes alpmum, Needwood Forest 

 8 axifrag a hypnoides, Do\ edale& c 

 Viburnum Opulus 

 Asperula odorata 

 Valerianella olitoria 



— dentata 



Prenanthes muralis 

 Hieracium sabaudum 



umbellatum 



Eupatorium cannabinum 

 Tussilago Petasites 

 Achillea Ptarmica 

 Tanacetum vulgare 

 Campanula latifolia 



rotundifolia, Jl. albo 



*Polemonium cteruleum, Wetton 

 Lithospermum officinale 

 Lycopsis arvensis 

 Atropa Belladonna, Alton Castle 

 Veronica scutellata 



montana 



Mentha acutifolia, side of the 



river, Oakamoor 

 Origanum vulgare 

 Galeopsis Tetrahit 



versicolor, Draycott 



Stachys annua 



ambi(jua, Alton 



*Anagallis tenella, Chartley 



Polygonum Bistorta 



hydropiper 



Fagopyrum 



Orchis mas^ula 



— i latifolia 



* conopsea 



Platanthera bifolia 



Listera ovala 



Epipactis latifolia 



Paris quadrifolia, copse by the 



side of the Leek road 

 Hyacinthus nonscriptus u fl. alb 

 Allium ursinum, Oakamoor &c. 

 Triglochin palustre 

 Sagittaria sagittifolia 

 Sparganium simplex 



— ramosum 



Andromeda polifolia, Chartley 

 Carex stellulata 



curta 



ovalis 



muricata 



vulpina 



■ strigosa 



■ sylvatica 

 ■fiava 



• binervis 



• pilulifera 



■ paludosa 



• riparia 

 - hirta 



eadle 



m, Chi 



Lycopodium clavatum, 



Common 

 Ophioglossum vulgatum 

 Aspidium aculeatum 



lobatum 

 Oreopteris 



jIwo eds 



- dilatatum 

 C ystopteris fragilis 

 Osmunda regalis, Chartley 



Art. V. — Analytic Descriptions of the Groups of Birds composing 

 the Order Strepitores. By Edward Blyth, Esq. 



No. IV. — Zygodactyli Leviroslres, or the Toucan family 

 (Rhamphastidce), and the Touraco and Coly family (Mu- 

 sophayidce). 



The second principal division of the Strepitores, or the Zy- 

 godactyli, comprises every member of the class, save only the 

 parrots {Scamores) and jacamars already described, which has 

 the outer toe reversed, in consequence of which the middle 

 or longest toe becomes the external front one ; differing in 

 this respect from the yoke-footed Heterodactyli, or the tro- 

 gons {Accurvirostres), wherein the first and second toes are 



