82 REMARKS ON SUl PLEMENT TO '' FLORA DANICA. 



review of the species figured in the Supplement will give an idea of 

 the special vegetation of each of these zones.* 



1. The Arctic Zone. 



Besides a certain number of species which equally grow in the 

 more southern parts of Scandinavia, and especially in the higher 

 regions of the Dovre mountains, this zone possesses also a considerable 

 number of species peculiar to the Arctic flora, and which are in part 

 limited either to Lapland or to Finmark, in part common to these two 

 countries, or to the whole Arctic zone. Many of these species are 

 found also in Iceland, in Greenland, or in Spitzbergen, as well 

 as in Finland, in North Russia, and in Siberia, while some even 

 extend through the whole extent of the Polar circle. The members 

 of tbe Arctic flora contained in the Supplement are the following, 

 which have not been found further south in the Scandinavian 

 peninsula : — 



Lapland. Marked (F) grow also in Finmark. 



Jungermannia polita. Rubus castoreus. 



(F) Calamagrostis lapponica (F) Sparganium fluitans. 



,, ,, var. opima. S. oligocarpon. 



Trisetum agrostideum. (F) Salix ovata. 



Arctophila pendulina. (F) S. Amandae. 

 (F) Eriophorum russeolum. S. versifolia. 



(F^ E. Callithrix. S. Lsestadiana. 



(F) Carex parallela. (F) Antennaria carpathica. 

 (F) C. limula. Mulgedium sibiricum. 



(F) C. laxa. (F) Nuphar intermedium. 

 (F) Luzula Wahlenbergii. Rosa carelica. 



Calypso bulbosa. 



Finmark. 



Carex Deinbollinra. Conioselinum Gmelini. 



Platanthera obtusata. Thalictrum Kemense. 



Crepis multicaulis. Ranunculus altaicus. 



Hieracium elegans. Braya alpina. 



Polemonium campanulatum, Moehringia latifolia. 



Besides these we may mention also the following which have no t 

 been found in other parts of Sweden and jSTorway. 



Polypodium rhaeticum. Carex gynocrates. 



Woodsia glabella. C. nardina. 



Hierochloe alpina. C. glareosa. 



Calamagrostis strigosa C. borealis. 



Col podium latifolium. C. halophila. 



Carex scirpoides. C. rufina. 



♦ It is scarcely necessary to say that it is not thought of giving here 

 in detail the geographical distribution of the plants of the Scandinavian 

 Peninsula, but it is supposed that this sketch may not be without interest, to 

 foreign botanists. For what concerns Swedec, we refer to the work of M. J. 

 Andersson, ** Aper9u de la vegetation et des plantes cultivees de la SuMe." 



