58 DUBLIN T7NIVEESITY 



*Avena strigosa. With the former, but might have been the remains of 

 former cultivation. 



2. On the banks of Lough Carra (also in Province xxvii.) : — 

 Viola canina (of Fries and Bab.). 

 Antennaria dioica. 

 Flantago maritima, var. Roots of this variety, brought from the county 



of Galway, have in cultivation produced broad and channelled leaves, 



similar to those of the ordinary P. maritima. 

 Sesleria ccerulea. 

 Gentiana verna. 

 Lycopodium selaginoides. 

 Rhamnu8 catharticus. 



Most of these plants are very abundant at Castle Taylor, and in other 

 parts of the Burrin limestone, but far less luxuriant and scarcer at 

 Lough Carra. In ditches by the road-side, close to the lake, grows in 

 profusion another scarce plant, Myriophyllum verticillatum. 



3. TJpon an islet called " Canova" in Lough Corrib (Province xxvi. 

 11 North Atlantic," of Babington) :— 



Dabeocia poly folia. 



Lasirea cemula. 



Cotyledon Umbilicus. 



Sedum anglicum. 



Pinguicula lusitanica. 



Hypericum Androscemum. 



Pinguicula vulgaris. 



Thalictrum flexuosum. 



Parnassia palustris. 



Hieracium umbellatum. A var., with phyllaries blacker than usual, 



and the whole plant tinged with lurid purple. 

 Galium boreale. 

 Drosera anglica. 

 JSchomus nigricans. 

 Myrica Gale. 

 Orobus tuberosus. 

 Galium saxatile. 

 Veronica officinalis. 



