19II- V'&Mi.Ci^Vi.— Notes on the Flora of Inishbofi.li. 169 



Sedum Rhodiola, DC. — Nortli coast, from Doonnahincena eastward. 



Drosera anglica, Huds. — Plentiful 111 marsh east of the head of Bunua- 

 miillcn Bay. 



Eryngium maritimura, L.— Sands opposite Inishlyon. 



Apium nodiflorum, Keichb. ill.— Near the harbour. 



Conopodium denudatum, Koch. — East of the harbour. 

 *^thusa Cynapium, L. — Sparingly in cultivated ground at rioonamore. 



(Enanthe crocata, I,. — Filling a ditch near St. Coleman's Church. 



Antennaria dioica, R. Br. — On sand-dunes opposite Inishlyon. 

 ♦Inula Helenium, I,. — With Allium Babingtoni} at east end of Inner Har- 

 bour. 



Bidens tripartita, I,. — South end of Lough Bofin. 

 ♦Matricaria discoidea, DC. — Now abundant around the harbour, and at 



Cloonamore. 

 ♦Tanacetum vulgare, I-. — Near St. Coleman's Church, planted or escaped. 



Arctium Newbouldii, Ar. Benn. — Frequent, no doubt the A. inter- 

 medium of More's list. 



Cnicus pratensis, Willd. — Abundant in many places. 



Crepis virens, L. — Chiefly in sandy ground. 



Campanula rotundifolia, L., var. spcciosa, ]\Iore. — I had looked for- 

 ward to gathering this line variety, which had apparentl)^ not been 

 collected since found and described bj?^ More in 1875 ; but in the 

 station indicated (a circumscribed area of sandy ground south of the 

 harbour) no plant answering the description — stems 9-20 inches, 

 leaves broader and more crowded, flowers i to 12, corolla one inch 

 or more long — could be seen. The form which grew there was no 

 more robust than I have seen in several other" localities, the stems 

 were about 9 inches, and flowers up to four on a stem, large, but 

 not larger than they often are. I am inclined to think that var. 

 spcciosa was a robust form stimulated into luxuriant growth by a 

 favourable season. 



Vaccinium Myrtillus, L. — Rocks by Church Lough. 



Lysimachia nemorum. L. — Rocks east of the harbour. 



Myosotis repens, G. Don. — By Loughnagrooaun and elsewhere. 

 ♦Symphytum officinale, L. — Occasionally — an escape. 

 t Convolvulus arvensis, L. — In some abundance in fields and on banks 



about the harbour. Church L., and" Cloonamore. 

 ♦Veronica Tournefortii, C. Gmel. — Cloonamore. 



V. serpyllifolia, L. — In several places. 



V. scutellata, L. — By Church Lough and elsewhere. 



Bartsia vlscosa, L. — Sparingly on the south and west sides of Church 

 Lough, and belaud Cloonamore. The credit for this interesting 

 addition to the flora belongs to A. W. Stelfox, who discovered the 

 first colony on the south bank of Church Lough. The plant grows 

 on Bofin in its accustomed habitat, and among native species ; its 

 occurrence here, coupled with its recent discovery in Connemara 

 {I.N., xviii., p. 253), disposes, to my mind, of any doubt as to its 

 being native throughout its Irish range— from Cork to Donegal. 



