1912-13.] BOTANICAL SOCIETY OF EDINBURGH 141 



In " Topi. Botany " the counties that are not vouched for 

 by specimens (as intermedia ) are : — 81, Berwick ( U. vulgaris 

 only is given in Dr. Johnston's " Berwick Flora," 1829, p. 8, 

 and from the description is that species) ; 92, Aberdeen S., 

 "Northern Flora "(1836), p. 18; 100, Clyde Isles, "Nichol- 

 son Herb. " (this is at Aberdeen) ; and 107, Sutherland E., 

 Graham Excur., in the Supplement; 85, Fife, "Ann. 

 Scot. Nat, Hist," 1901, 103; 93, Aberdeen N., Trail; 95, 

 Elgin, Druce. The others with " sp. " noted can be seen 

 in Mr. Watson's herbarium at Kew. 



For the rest I have specimens, and they are all ocJtroleuca. 

 The above counties will need specimens as vouchers as to 

 which of the two occurs in them. 



I give the original description of Hartman, 1 and 

 synonyms: — IT. ochroleuca, n sp. — Foliis distichis, laciniis 

 planis plus minus parce vesiculiferis, labio corollae superiore 

 palatum inflatum bis superante, calcare brevi conico a labio 

 inferiore descendente. Jul., Aug. 2 



Praecedenti affinis (i.e. inteirmedia), a qua differt : herba 

 tota multo tenuiore ; vesiculis non solum ramis nudis, sed 

 etiam foliis adhaerentibus ; scaporufescenti-brunneo ; colore 

 corollae pallidiore ; longe alia forma, colore et directione 

 calcaris. U. intermedia enim vesiculis inter lacinias fol. 

 omnino destituta praebet scapum, bracteas calycesque semper 

 laete viridia et calcar (subulatum, labio inferiori adpressum) 

 ejusdem coloris ac corolla et saepissime ejusdem longi- 

 tudinis ac labium inferius." 



U. brevicomis, Celak, " Oest. Bot. Zeit," 1886, p. 253. 



U. intermedia sub-sp. ochroleuca, Lange, "Hand. Danske 

 FL," 1887, p. 524. 



U. litoralis — U. ochroleuca x intermedia, Melander, "Bot. 

 Not," 1887, p. 175. 



U. inteirmedia x minor, Neuman, " Bot. Not," 1900, p. 65. 



U. ochroleuca f. microceras, Strandmark ! "Bot Not," 

 1900, p. 66. 



Distribution in Europe (no doubt incomplete) : Bohemia ; 

 Germany (Black Forest) ; Tyrol ; Norway, to 64° N. lat. ; 

 Finland; Sweden, in thirteen provinces from Halland to 

 Yesterbotten. 



1 " Bot. Notiser " (1857), p. 30. 



2 The long detailed description I omit. 



