280 CRYPTOGAMIC FLORA OF WARWICKSHIRE, 
264.—O. Lyelii H.and T. On trees, ash, and elm, local. Near Solihull! 
Chadshunt! Copt Heath! proreaieeatons Ladbrook! Offchurch ! 
&c. Never noticed in fruit. 
265.—0. leiocarpum B. and §. On Ontario ee rare. Near Rowing- 
ton Village! May. 
267.—0. rivulare Turn. ‘On stones and a water wheel at Bidford Grange ~ 
—Bree.” (Purt., Vol. IIT., p. 388.) 
FUNARIACEZ, 
279.—Ephemerum serratum Schreb. Phascwm serratum Wils., Hobk. In 
fallow fields, local or overlooked. Sutton Park! Acocks Green! 
near Solihull! Olton! wood near Maxtoke! Coleshill Heath! 
March, April. 
283.—Physcomitrella patens Hedw. Damp marly places. Damp marly bank 
near Fillongley Hall! Autumn. 
285.—Physcomitrium pyriforme L. Gymnostomum pyriforme Purt. ‘‘ Bank 
bounding mill pool at Oversley,” (Purt.) On moist banks, &c., 
local. Sutton Park! Aston! Water Orton! Dukesbridge! April. 
288.—Funaria fascicularis Dicks. Physcomitrium fasciculare Wils., Hobk. 
Entosthodon fascicularis Berk. Heathy waysides and fallow fields, 
rare. Coleshill Heath! fields near Maxtoke Priory! in a field 
near Ufton Church, 1872! Sutton Park! April. 
290.—F. hygrometrica Li. Walls, heathy waysides, &c., very frequent. 
Occurring in all the districts. May, Novem ber. 
BARTRAMIACER. 
292.—Amblyodon dealbatus Dicks. On damp turfy heaths, near pools, 
very rare. Sutton Park! April. 
299.—Bartramia pomiformis L. On dry shady banks, local. ‘Lane 
from Spernall Ash to Middletown” (Purt.) Sutton Park! Middle- 
ton Heath! Curdworth! Marston Green! April. 
307.—Philonotis fontana L. Bartramia fontana L., Purt., Wils., Berk. 
Marshes, rare in fruit. ‘‘ Cookhill,” (Purt.) Near Windley, Keepers’, 
and Ponca ee Pools, Sutton Park! waysides near Four Ashes! 
April. 
[fo BE CONTINUED. | 
A TUBE-DWELLING STENTOR. 
BY J. LEVICK. 
I have been much puzzled for some time past by a curious tube- 
dwelling Infusorian, which I have found occasionally upon the weeds 
brought from Barnt Green, (a locality to which we are indebted for so 
many interesting and beautiful forms of fresh-water life,) and until 
recently have been quite unable to make out what the creature could be, 
the specimens being so small and deeply embedded in foreign matter that 
only a glimpse of the tube and ciliated disc could be obtained. 
I had nearly come to the conclusion that my new find was one of the 
species of Freia, possibly F. elegans, to which it appeared to bear great 
resemblance, notwithstanding the difficulty that that genus of Infusoria 
is described as marine only. 
