Fbb. 1894.] BOTANICAL SOCIETY OF EDINBURGH. 153 



the turf-covered top of a wall by Braemore. The white- 

 Howered form was not uncommou on the moorland near 

 the Falls of Glomak. 



MELAMPYUU^[ PEATENSE, L, — Loch Maree side, Braemore, 

 Dimdonnell, Drumroonie, etc., out not so common in 

 Western Eoss as in some of the other Scotch counties. 

 The var. montanum, Johnston, occurred on An Teallach, etc. 



(? M. SYLVATICUM, L. — Doubtfully recorded by me from 

 a wooded rock near Strome, but it may have been a 

 yellow-flowered form of M. praicn^c, i.r. var. Jiians. Dixon 

 records it in his list of Gairloch plants.) 



* Ehinanthus Crista-galli, L. — jSTot uncommon, and 

 usually as the var. angv.stifolia, Koch. The mountain form, 

 var. Drunimond-Hayi, Buch. White, occurred on the Slioch, 

 An Teallach, etc. 



Orobanche rubra, Sm. {0. Epithymum, DC). — In an 

 island near the mainland at Gairloch (Bowman) in " Xew 

 Botanical Guide." It is included in the Gairloch list. 



* Utricularia neglecta, Lehm. — Bare. In Loch 

 a ]\lhuilinn. 



* U. MINOR, L. — With the above, not in flower. 



l\ INTERMEDIA, Hayue. — In " Topographical Botany " 

 (Churchill Babington). I saw it in Glen Torridon. 



■* PINGUICULA VULGARIS, L. — Common. The var. 

 al2)icola, Beichb., which is a very large-flowered form with 

 more contiguous petals, occurred on the north-western 

 slopes of A Glas-bheine, in Kintail. Boswell Syme said 

 he had never seen any British specimen like it before. 



P. lusitanica, L. — Eecorded in Hooker's " Flora Scotiea " 

 and " Xew Botanical Guide." It is not rare. It occurs in 

 Gairloch, Kintail, Ullapool, etc. 



(Mentha longieolia, Huds. (J/ syhcstris, L.), is given in 

 Dixon's list. An almost certain error.) 



: M. viRiDis, L. — On the beach at Jeantown as an out- 

 cast from gardens. 



(M. piperita, Huds. — Another misnomer, which is 

 recorded iu the Gairloch list.) 



* M. HiRSUTA, Huds. — Glen Docharty, Ullapool, Apple- 

 cross, Kishorn, etc. 



* M. SATIVA, L. — Eare. Applecross. It is given in 

 Dixon's list, but probably not correct. 



