18970 f^RAEGHR. — trhh Ptanis^ in the Provmce of Leinster* 93 



Pyrus Aria, Bhrh. 



III. Queen's— among native wood (Oak, Ash, Hazel) on Maryborough 



esker, and among Birch west of Portarlington ; a native here. 

 VII. King's— in Derryadd wood, hedges near Philipstown, and on 

 limestone rocks 4 miles N.W. of Philipstown ; appears to be 

 native in this district. 

 Myrlophyllum vertlclllatum, I^inn. 

 III. Queen's — Mountmellick. 

 V. Meath— Lough Sheelin and Athboy. 

 Callltrlche obtusangrula, Le Gall. 

 V. Kii^DARE — ditch at Maynooth. 

 C. autumnalis, I^inn. 



X. Tyrone— Omagh and Strabane, Miss Knowles. 

 EpIIoblum angrustlfollum, Linn. 



IV. WiCKi^ow- on high clififs overlooking the S.W. shore of Lough- 

 nahanagan. A new record for this rare plant in District IV., as 

 the old ** Scalp " record has been abandoned. 

 JE. roseum, Schreb. 



V. Louth — growing with E. obscurum on a wet wall near Queensboro'. 

 Of another specimen from the same station, Rev. E. S. 

 Marshall writes, " I believe E. obscurufn x roseum., upon the 

 whole nearer to roseum.''' 



CIcuta vlrosa, Linn. 



V. MeaTh — Lough Crew near Oldcastle. 

 ChaBrophyllum temulum, Linn. 



V. Kii^DARE— Thomastown. MeaTH— Lay town, Drogheda, Kilmes* 

 san, Bective, Navan. LouTH — Louth and Togher. 

 VII. King's— Bdenderry. 

 X. Cavan — Mount Nugent 



In all cases in shady hedge-banks, often in considerable 

 quantity. I see no reason to doubt its being indigenous. 

 tAnthrlscus vulgaris^ Bernh. 



V. Meath — Peter and Paul Abbey near Trim. LouTh — on Louth 

 Abbey. 

 VII. EllNG'S— about Philipstown. 



In its few inland stations, it haunts old buildings and dry 

 roadsides, and its rank is doubtful. 

 Cornus sangulnea, Linn. 



VII. EllNG'S — in hedges four miles west of and also one mile north of 

 Philipstown, probably the remnants of native stock. 

 Valeriana MIkanll, Syme. 



V. MeaTH— Lough Crew demesne. Out of perhaps a hundred 

 Valerians examined in 1896, this plant alone was good Mikanity 

 though many plants approaching this form were found. 

 V, sambucifolia is the common Irish plant. 



•Valerlanella rlmosa* Bast. 

 VII. King's— in a potato field at Bdenderry. A weed of cultivation. 



