500 



1355 BROMUS COMMUTATUS. 



21 Middlesex ! Hind cat. 



22 Berks. 



23 Oxford. Ayres sp. 



24 Bucks. Pryor.* 



25 Suff. east. "racemosus." 



26 west. " racemosus." 



27 Norf. east. " racemosus." 



28 west. " racemosus." 



29 Cambridge. Babington cat. 



30 Bedford. Newbould ms. 



31 Hunts. Newbould cat. 



32 Northton. "racemosus." 



33 Gloster east. Prentice cat. 



34 west ! Thwaites sp. 



35 Monmouth. Ley sp. 



36 Hereford. 



37 Worcester. G. Maw sp. 

 88 Warwick. Bloxam sp. 



39 Stafford. Douglas cat. 



40 Salop. Babington sp. 



41 Glamorgan. Barnard ms. 

 43 Kadnor. Jones cat. 



45 Pembroke. Babington cat. 

 47 Montgomery. Melvill cat. 

 50 Denbigh, "racemosus." 

 52 Anglesea. "racemosus." 

 58 Lincoln south ! 



54 north ! 



55 Leicester. 



56 Notts. T. H. Cooper sp. 



58 Chester ! J. L. Warren sp. 



59 Lane, south. Lewis sp. 



61 York s. east. 



62 n. east. Baker sp. 



63 s. w. F. A., Lees cat. 



64 m. w. F. A. Lees cat. 



65 n. west. Ward sp. 



66 Durham. Storey sp. 



67 Northumberland. 



68 Cheviotland. Tate cat. 



72 Dumfries. " racemosus." 



73 Kirkcud. " racemosus." 



76 Kenfrew. Kennedy cat.f 



77 Lanark. Kennedy cat.f 



78 Peebles. Brotherston cat. 



79 Selkirk. Farquharson cat. 



81 Berwick, "racemosus." 



82 Haddington. 



83 Edinburgh ! Campbell sp. 



85 Fife. Syrne ms. 1870. 



86 Stirling ! 



87 Perth west. Syme cat. 



89 east. (F. B. White). 



90 Forfar. Croall sp. 



91 Kincardine. Syme cat. 



92 Aber. south ! Dickie cat. 



93 north. Dickie flo. 



94 Banff. 



96 Easterness ! 

 98 Argyle. 



00 Clyde-isles. Hennedy cat. 



01 Cantire. Balfour cat. 



02 Eb. south. Balfour sp. 

 12 Shetland. Tate cat. I 



[11 Orkney. Gillies ms.] 

 N.B. Not unlikely to occur in 

 Orkney ; but the specimen 

 labelled "pratensis" in the 

 herbarium of Dr. Gillies is 

 a subglabrous mollis. The 

 name " racemosus," as used 

 in books and on labels often 

 intended this present spe- 

 cies ; but it was perhaps 

 almost equally often applied 

 to a state of mollis with gla- 

 brous inflorescence. The eu- 

 racemosus (of Syme, in Eng. 

 Bot. ed. 3) is a third appli- 

 cation of the name to a 

 closely allied grass, which 

 apparently is a casual im- 

 portation along with foreign 

 seeds of rye-grass, &c. In 

 the work referred to, Dr. 

 Syme enumerates counties 

 ]0 17 18 or 19 20 21 29 

 30 and 58 for his eu-racemo- 

 sus. Mr. Briggs sent a spe- 

 cimen of it from South 

 Devon, and Dr. Syme one 

 so labelled from Fife. My 



