771 



112. C. spadicea. 113. C. sempervirens. 114. C. firma. 

 115. C. refracta. 116. C. fimbriata. 



9. Spikes racemose ; fi'uit pubescent. 



117. C. clandestina. 



10. Spikes loosely racemose ; beak of the fiuit roundish, short, or 

 membranaceous, or none. 



118. C.panicea. 119. C. vaginata. 120. C. pilosa. 121. C. 

 strigosa. 



11. Spikes long, dense, pendulous. 



122. C. pendula. 123. C. microcarpa. 



H. Male spikes numerous ; stigmas 3. 



1 . Fruit scarcely beaked, sometimes scabrous above, but not every- 

 where pubescent. 



124. C. glauca. 125. C. claviformis. 126. C. Genuensis. 127. 

 C. lasiochlaena. 128. C. lanceolata. 129. C. acuminata. 130. 

 C. longiaristata. 131. C. hispida. 



2. Fruit veiy hairy ; beak bifid. 



132. C.JiUformis. 133. C. evoluta. 134. C. hirta. 



3. Fi-uit not hairy ; beak bifid. 



135. C. secalina. 136. C. hordeiformis. 137. C. vesicaria. 



138. C. ampidlacea. 139. C. riparia. 140. C. Soleirolii. 



141. C. nutans. 142, C. paludosa. 

 " On many of these species, and on other named species which Mr. 

 Woods regards merely as varieties of one or other of the foregoing, 

 the paper contains numerous observations. Of the following species 

 the descriptions are not sufficiently complete to allow of the author 

 placing them : C. alopecurus, Lap. ; C. juncoides, Presl ; C. costata, 

 Presl ; C. furcata. Lap.; C. manostachys, Spr. ; C. fusca. All.; 

 C. nesliaca, S titer ; C. Bastardiana, De C. ; and C. badia, Pers.^' 



G. L. 



Note on the New Locality for Cyperus fuscus. 

 By George G. Mill, Esq. 



In announcing his discovery of the rare Cyperus fuscus on Shal- 

 ford Common, near Guildford, Surrey (Phytol. ii. 609), Mr. Salmon is 

 naturally anxious to know whether the habitat is a genuine one, or 

 whether the plant has only been naturalized in that spot by some 

 botanist, desirous, like myself, that it should not be lost to the Flora 



