808 HISTORY OF BRITISH FERNS. 



Sheravd's plant, from the Mourne Mountains, is Athyrium 

 Filix-f(£mina blanched, not a variety of As2)lenium Adian- 

 tiim-wgriim, as supposed by some, or Asplcnium acutitm, as 

 stated by others. 



CoNNAXJGiiT. — Connemara ; Gort (on limestone), Galway, J. R, 

 Kinahan. 



Leinstee. — Wicklow (var. multifidum), D. Moore. Louth. Dub- 

 lin (on granite). King's. Kilkenny, J, R. Kinahan. 



MuxsTER. — Cork. Kerry ; also Mucruss, KilJarney (vars. viul- 

 tifidum and rhoitkuni). Clare (var. multifidum), J. R. Kinahan. 

 Carthy's Cove, Waterford. Keeper Hill, Tipperary. Lime- 

 rick, J. R. Kinahan. 

 The species is very common in Ireland. 



Channel Isles. — Jersey (var. midtifidum and others). Guern- 

 sey (var. rhcBticum and other forms), C. Jaclcson. 



Eleclinum Spicant, Both. 



Peninsula. — Cornwall. Devonshire. Somersetshire. 



Channel. — Hampshire. Isle of Wight. Dorsetshire. Wilt- 

 shire. Sussex. 



Thames. — Hertfordshire. Kent, Tunbridge (var. hetcroplit/llum, 

 and otlier forms), G. B. Wollaston. Surrej'. IMiddlesex. 

 Berkshire. Oxfordshire. Essex. 



OusK. — Suffolk. Norfolk. Cambridgeshire. Bedfordshire. 

 Northamptonshire. 



Severn. — Warwickshire. Gloucestershire ; Nailsworth (fronds 



