294 ADDITIONAL HABITATS. 



EPILOBIUM angustifolium, p. 86. Tweedside at Birgham, Mr R. 

 D. Thomsom. Lumsden Dean. 



VACCINIUM Vitis-idaa, p. 88. On the wooded rocky hill above 

 Hepburn at Chillingham remarkably tall, but not abundant, 

 Messrs W. Baird and Johnston. Banks of the Whiteaddjer 

 above Abbey St Bathans, sparingly, Mr Thomas Brown. 

 (The specimens gathered in this station are very bushy, with 

 leaves much crowded. See HOOKER, Brit. FL i. 178.) On 

 Hedge-hope, abundant. About the top of Dirrington Law, 

 plentiful. 



PYROLA rotundifolia, p. 93. Haiden Dean, abundant. 



PYROLA media, p. 94. On the wooded and heathy bank above 

 the school-house at Abbey St Bathans, most abundant. In 

 Lumsden Dean. 



DIANTHUS deltoides, p. 95. Very common in the west of Ber- 

 wickshire, but rare on its eastern side, where, however, it oc- 

 curs in tolerable abundance at St Helen's church, and in 

 Lumsden Dean. 



SILENE maritime p. 96. The period at which this plant flowers 

 is very erroneously given in the text, and the reader is re- 

 quested to insert June for Aug. Sept. when only a few late 

 specimens can be got in blossom. On the Farn Islands, as 

 Mr W. Robertson has correctly remarked, it is very large, 

 and assumes something of the habit of the common and much 

 less beautiful S. inflata. 



ARE N ARIA verna, p. 98. Spindlestone Craigs, Mr R. Embleton. 



SEDUM villosum, p. 99. Boggy spots between Whitchester and 

 Longformacus, plentiful; and on the top of a hill at the 

 road-side about half way between Dunse and Longformacus, 

 Mr Thomas Brown. 



LYCHNIS diurna, p. 100. The fertile plant is, in general, much 

 more robust and clumsy than the barren one ; and the petals 

 of the former have a large tooth at the sides, which those of 

 the latter commonly want, their margins being entire. The 

 difference between them is so considerable, that the plants 

 can readily be distinguished at a distance ; and though I do 



