520 



1401 ASPLENIUM SEPTENTRIONALE. 



64 York m. west. 



68 Cheviot. Atkinson sp. 



69 Westmoreland ? 



70 Cumberland ! Hort sp. 

 80 Boxburgh. Duncan cat. 

 83 Edinburgh ! Balfour cat. 

 89 Perth east. Gardiner sp. 



92 Aber. south. Dickie ms. 

 [15 90 111 ; all errors ?] 



1402 Seolopendrmm 

 vulgare. 



Counties all the English, ex- 

 cept 42 43 47 48 53. In 

 Scotland, my notes are 

 thus : 



72 Dumfries. Gray cat. 



73 Kirkcudbright. Gray cat. 



75 Ayr. Duncan cat. 



76 Renfrew. Kennedy cat. 



77 Lanark. Balfour sp. 



79 Selkirk. Farquarson cat. 



80 Boxburgh. 



81 Berwick. 



83 Edinburgh. Brand sp. 



85 Fife. I. B. Balfour ms. 



86 Stirling. Croall cat. 



87 Perth west. Syme cat. 



88 mid. (F. B. White). 



89 east. (F. B. White). 



90 Forfar. 



91 Kincardine. Croall sp. 



93 Aber. north. Dickie flo. 



95 Elgin. Gordon cat. 



96 Easterriess. Stables cat. 

 98 Argyle. 



00 Clyde-isles. Kennedy cat. 



01 Cantire. Balfour cat. 



02 Eb. south. Balfour cat. 



03 mid. Ross cat. 



04 north. Graham sp. 

 07 or 08 Sutherland ? 



09 Caith. Brown Campst. cat.* 



11 Orkney. Gillies ms. 



12 Shetland. One locality. 



1403 Blechnum boreale. 



Counties all, except 31 42 74 

 98 105 ; likely to occur in 

 all these counties, unless the 

 two first nos. should be real 

 exceptions. 



1404 Pteris aquilina. 

 Counties all, except 74 105. 



1405 Adiantum C. Veneris. 



1 Corn. west. Tozer sp. 



2 east. 



3 Devon south. Flower sp. 



4 north. J.E.Graysp. 

 6 Som. north ? 



9 Dorset. " Miss Payne ! " 

 41 Glamorgan. Brent sp. 

 71 Man. Bylands, 1841. 

 N.B. Curiously enough, seed- 

 ling plants of Pteris aquilina 

 have been repeatedly report- 

 ed as the Adiantum. [39 40 

 57 91 100]. 



1406 Trichomanes radicans. 



41 Merioneth. Backhouse. 



64 York mid west, extinct ? 



98 Argyle. Landsborough. 



00 Arran. Landsborough. 



This fern has been reported to 

 grow in South and North 

 Wales, in Cornwall, West 

 Yorkshire, Arran and Argyle. 

 Mr. Backhouse holds it truly 

 native in South Wales ; its 

 station being difficult of ac- 

 cess and looking natural. 

 But surely such a situation 

 is the one likely to be select- 

 ed for experimental intro- 

 duction. The other alleged 



