THE HIGH ALPINE FLORA OF BRITAIN 231 



112. Luzula ca7npestrzs, Cand, var. nudtiflora^ Brand in 

 Koch, "Syn. deutsch. schweiz. Fl" Aufl. 3, p. 2514 (Liefg. 16). 



Syn. — Ju7icus inultiflorus^ Ehrhart, " Calam." n. 127, ex Hoffm., 



"Fl. Deutschl." i. 169 {\Zo6); Ju7icus erectus, Pers., "Syn. Plant," 



i. 386 (1805); Luzula 77iulf (flora, Lejeune, " Fl. Spa," i. 169 (1811); 



Juncus i7iter77iedius, (non Host) ThuilL, " Fl. env. Paris," ed. 2, i. 



178 (1799). 



Ascends to 1020 m. on the mountains of the Breadalbane 

 district ("Fl. Perthsh." 301). 



113. Luzula Sudetica, Cand. (18 15). — Head of Glen Callater, 

 in Aberdeenshire (Syme). Alpine situations in the Breadalbane 

 district (White). Of Syme's three varieties of L. multiflora^ 

 continental botanists place a and ^ under L. ca77ipestris, and keep 

 up y as the present plant. 



Fam. 29. POTAMOGETONACE^. 



114. Pota77togeto7i alpi7ms, Balbis. — Ascends to 1020 m. in the 

 Scottish Highlands (Ar. Bennett ex " Journ. Bot." 1907, 374). 



Fam. 30. CvPERACEiE. 



115. Eriophoriwi atigustifolhwi, Roth. — Ascends to about 1000 

 m. on the mountains of Breadalbane district ("Fl. Perthsh." 319). 

 Ascends to iioo m. on Sgorr-an-Dubh, on the west side of Glen 

 Eunach (Prof J. Trail, 1902). 



116. Carex lepori7ia, L. — North corrie of Loch-na-gar, at 1005 

 m., 1906 (Watson, "Bot. Exch. Club Rept." ii. 116 [1907] ; Dickie, 

 66). 



117. Carex LacheTialii, Schkuhr. — In the northern corrie of 

 Loch-na-gar, at 1005 m. (E. S. Marshall and W. A. Shoolbred in 

 "Joarn. Bot." 1907, 295). Discovered on rocks in Loch-na-gar . . . 

 1836, by Mr. Dickie and Mr. Clark" (" Engl. Bot. suppl." 2815 

 [1838]). It was found on the south-west corner of the table-top 

 at about 1070 m. Syme ("Engl. Botany," x. 100) "found it 

 \C. lagopi7ia\ in 185 1 plentifully by the side of a small loch on 

 the north side of the hill, the name of the loch being, I believe, 

 Loch-an-ean." 



118. Carex caTtescens, Lightf — Ascends to 1037 m. on the 

 mountains of the Breadalbane district (G. C. Druce in " Ann. Scot. 

 Nat. Hist." 1900, 231); and to iioo m. in Ross-shire (var. fallax, 

 Asch. and Graebn.). See notes on this sedge in " Journ. Bot." 1908, 

 369. Lightfoot's " Fl. Scotica " is the correct authority. 



119. Carex ecJmiata, Murray (1770). — Summit of Beenkeragh 

 (Hart in "Cyb. Hib." ed. 2, 397). 



