ORDER RANUNCULACEvE. I9 



15. Ranunculus Flammula, L. (Lesser Spearwort). Native. 

 British type. Range 1-3. Common in swampy places and 

 about the lakes and tarns ; ascending to 700 yards on 

 Helvellyn, and to the highest springs of High Street and 

 Coniston Old Man. Dr. Boswell, in the Exchange Club 

 Report for 1880, p. 28, identifies a plant gathered by Mr. 

 Bolton King on the stony shore of Ullswater with the Loch 

 Leven R. reptans. Long ago Woodward recorded it from 

 Coniston Water, but specimens gathered there lately by Mr. 

 A. G. More were the var. pseudo-reptans ; and I have also 

 notes of this var. from Rydal Lake (J. C. Melvill), Ennerdale 

 Lake (Whitehaven Cat.), Bassenthwaite Lake from Peelwyke 

 downwards (W. Hodgson), and Urswick Tarn (Miss 

 Hodgson). 



16. Rammculus Lingua, L. (Greater Spearwort). Native. 

 English type. Range i. Deep ditches and shores of some 

 of the tarns. Rare. 



C. Naddle Beck, near Keswick. — (M.) In West Cumberland 

 at Cleator (Rev. F. Addison), and Ennerdale, Eskdale, and 

 Wastdale (J. Robson). Ditches in the moss at Newton 

 Regny. — (B.) Ditches near Dubmill, Allonby ; and in Shawk 

 Beck, near Curthwaite. — (W, Hodgson.) 



W. Foulshaw Moss and other places near Kendal. — (Wilson, 

 Gough.) 



L. Mosses and damp meadows in Furness and Cartmel. — 

 (Aiton.) In the water and ditches of the moss by Hawkshead. 

 — (Lawson.) Esthwaite Water. — (Rev. W. Wood.) Borders 

 of Urswick Tarn, near Ulverstone. — (Miss Hodgson.) 



18. Ranunculus aui'icomus, L. (Wood Crow-Foot, Goldi- 

 locks). Native. British. Range i. Woods and hedgebanks, 

 frequent, ascending to 200 yards. — (Watson.) First recorded 

 as a Westmoreland plant by Lawson in his Catalogue of 1688. 

 A stunted variety occurs abundantly on the Cumberland 

 shore of Ullswater, at Oldchurch. — (W. Hodgson.) 



