CORRESPONDENCE. 123 
Linaria purpurea, L.—On old walls near Colefor 
Salsola Tragus, L.—In waste ground-near eh canal. 
Ma sr pail Din L., or M. borealis, Wallm.,Syme db. Bot. ii. p. 169.— 
Lh i pond and meadow land near Glo 
Piala e minor, Retz.—On heaps of rubbish near puede canal. 
Panicum miliaceum, L.—1n waste ground near Gloucester. 
WELWITSCHH ITER ANGOLENSE. 
CORRIGENDUM, 
From the absence of Dr. Welwitsch in Paris while the sheet describing his 
new Bignoniacee was passing through the press, the name FERNANDOA was 
misprinted Ferdinandia (Vol. ITI. p. 330). 
CORRESPONDENCE. 
Leucojum vernum, Linn. 
J. C. Mansel, Esq., of Longthorns, writes that he has visited Bridport, and 
is able to confirm Mr. Hardy's suggestion as to Leucojum vernum being pro- 
Deer. a ee plant Set p.88). He found it growing in abundance for a 
more t rter of a mile on the ba pepe. sides of a thick 
hedgerow in a remote diis in which there are no houses. € ca having 
been good enough to forward fresh specimens, we shall in a umber give 
a ues of the plant, and we reserve till ther. the fete Eurus which 
Mansel has communicated. 
Fagus Forest in New England, Australia. 
Mr. Charles Moore, the able Director of ^ Botanie Garden of Sydney, 
returning from a botanical excursion through the dense forests of the high- 
lands of Tow England, discloses, for the PER time, the existence of an exten- 
sive Fagus forest in that part of Australia. It covers the elevated ranges 
between the rivers Bellingen and Clarence, in belts from two to three miles in 
length. The Fagus is allied to F. Cunninghami, but the leaves are remarkably 
acute, their teeth smaller and more numerous; moreover the leaves attain a 
etc, The el eM tu —— a 
number of tho ‘Fragmenta Piptoguphis A P 
Frnp. MUELLER. 
Melbourne Baline Gardens, Dee. 26, 1865. 
