igti. 



Praegek. — Notes on the Flora of Inishbofin. 



171 



In addition to these unrecorded species, a number of 

 plants for which a single station only was found by More 

 and Barrington were seen in other places. It is not worth 

 giving the additional stations in detail, but in the following 

 list the numbers i, 2, 3 signify the number of stations other 

 than those given in IMore's report in which the plants 

 were observed ; where species proved to be of frequent or 

 common occurrence, the letter f or c is added. 



|Fumaria pallidiflora, 2. 

 fSenebiera Coronopus, f. 



Sagina subulata, 2. 



S. nodosa, i. 



Speigularia rupestris, f. 



S. salina, i. 



Hj'pericum Androsaemum, j 



Geranium molle, f. 



Planus spinosa, i. 



Rosa canina, 2. 



Crithmum maritimum, f. 



Heraclcum Sphondylium, c. 



Hieracium Pilosella, f. 



Aster Tripolium, i. 



Pulicaria dysentcrica, 3. 



Menyanthes trifoliata, f. 

 tVeronica agrestis, c. 



Pedicularis palustris, i. 



Scrophularia aquatica, i. 



Scutellaria minor, 2. 



Utricularia minor, i. 



Primula vulgaris, f. 



Polygonum amphibium, f. 



Empetrum nigrum, 4. 

 *Euphorbia Helioscopia, c. 



Myrica Gale, i. 



Orchis maculata, i. 

 *Allium Babingtonii, 2. 



Narthecium ossifragum, f. 



Sparganium affine, 3. 



Juncus Gerardi, f. 



Triglochin palustre, f. 



Potamogeton natans, f. 



P. pusillus, I. 



Zostera marina, i. 



Schaenus nigricans, 2. 



Rhynchospora alba, 2. 



Eleocharis palustris, c. 



Carex extensa, f. 



C. distans, f. 



Calamagrostis Epigejos, i. 



Koeleria cristata, f. 



Glyceria plicata, 2. 



Lastrea aemula, 4. 



One species in the above list deserves particular mention — 

 namely Calamagrostis Epigejos. This was recorded in 

 More's list from one station, namely " sparingly on rocky 

 banks at east end of the inner harbour." I refound it there 

 — a single clump of about a square yard, bearing a single 

 flowering stem. In view of this plant's rarity here, and 

 elsewhere in Ireland — it is on record from Clare and Derry 

 only — an additional station on Bofin was very welcome. 

 This was furnished by an isolated rocky knoll in the 

 fields behind the north end of Cloonamore Bay ; here the 

 plant was in profusion, and flowering abundantly. 



