13. 
14. 
15. 
16. 
iT. 
18. 
Le: 
20. 
21. 
22. 
23. 
24. 
25. 
26. 
to the Flora of Ireland. 329 
Mr. Mackay informs me that this is identical with his C. euro- 
pea. 
Myosotis repens. Cunnamara, Galway, Westport and the Mullet, 
Mayo, July, 1836, C. C. B., Mag. Zool. and Bot. 11.124. Glen 
Cree, Wicklow, 1837, Mr. J. Ball, Ann. Nat. Hist. ii. 29. 
Orobanche barbata. On the roots of ivy in many places, C. C. B. 
I learn from Mr. Mackay that the true O. minor, which is para- 
sitical upon clover, has not been found in Ireland, and that 
therefore the O. minor of the Fl. Hibern. is this plant. 
Lamium intermedium. Near to the foot of Ben Bulben, Sligo, 
1837, Mr. J. Ball, Ann. Nat. Hist. ii. 34. 
Atriplex erecta. In fields in many places, C. C. B. - 
A. rosea. On the sea-shore, not uncommon, C. C. B. 
Polygonum viviparum. Ben Bulben, Sligo, 1887, Mr. J. Ball, 
Ann. Nat. Hist. ii. 34. I am informed that a notice of its dis- 
covery in this place by Mr. Murphy exists in the Mag. of Nat. 
Hist., but I have been unable to find it, and the plant is omitted 
in the Flora Hibernica. 
Euphorbia Peplis. Garreries Cove, near Tramore, Waterford, 
1836, Miss Trench, Mag. Zool. and Bot. ii. 124. 
Salix ambigua. Tully, Cunnamara, Galway, Aug. 1835, C. C. B., 
Mag. Nat. Hist. ix. 129. 
Juncus nigritellus. Bogs between Sligo and Ballina, 1837, Mr. 
J. Ball, Ann. Nat. Hist. ii. 34. 
Potamogeton oblongus. Common, C. C. B. 
P. longifolius. Inthe narrow part of Lough Corrib, between 
Ma’am and Cong, Galway, Mr. J. Ball, Supp. to Eng. Botany, 
f. 2847. 
Carex cunescens. On the shores of Lough Neagh, 1836, Mr. 
D. Moore, Comp. Bot. Mag.i. 307. Under the name of C. Buz- 
baumit. 
Calamagrostis lapponica. Lough Neagh, 1836, Mr. D. Moore, 
Comp. Bot. Mag. i. 191. 
Keleria valesiaca. Ben Bulben, Sligo, 1837, Mr. J. Bal/, Ann. 
Nat. Hist. ii. 34. Having myself gathered this plant on Ben 
Bulben during the last summer, I have come to the conclusion 
that it is not K. valesiaca, but only a remarkable alpine form 
of K. cristata. It has a much denser spike than is usual in K. 
cristata, an elongated ascending stem thickly clothed with the 
dead leaves of the preceding year, and glabrous leaves which 
are sometimes ciliated. 
