845 
sposal, that they have described so many species —- this is a com- 
mon fault by monographers working in a country far away, a fault 
which now-a-days often is committed with regard to northern spe- 
cies belonging to genera, monographed by Central-European botanists. 
67. Euphrasia borealis (Towns.) Wettst. 
This is the only Faeröese species with larger corollas, and it is 
therefore easily distinguished from the other species. On the other 
hand it is very near E. brevipila Burnat et Gremli, and is perhaps, 
as suggested by Mr. Townsend, only an eglandular from of it. 
68. E. curta Fr., Wettst. 
Small specimens of this species are not rare beyond the en- 
closed fields in the lowlands; they are rather broadleaved and tend 
to approach E. latifolia Pursh, without giving place for any doubt 
with regard to their naming. 
69. E. minima Jacquin apud Schleich.; R. Wettstein, Monogr. 
der Gatt. Euphrasia, 1896, p. 151; E. scotica Wettst., 1. c. p. 170: 
Townsend, Journ. Botany, 1897, p. 425; Ostenfeld, Bot. Fær., I, 
p. 56; E. paludosa Townsend, Journ. Botany, 1891, p. 161, non R. Br.; 
E. gracilis Ostenfeld, Bot. Fzrées I, p.56, non Fr.; E. latifolia Osten- 
feld, ibid. p. 56, non Pursh; E. arctica Lange apud Rostrup, Fzréernes 
Flora, Bot. Tids. IV, 1870, p. 47, ex parte (quoad plants færoenses). 
In 1891 Mr. F. Townsend published a note in the Journal of 
Botany on a new form of Euphrasia, which he named E. paludosa. 
He had found it in boggy ground around Braemar in Scotland. In 
some respects it was like E. gracilis, but differed, among other cha- 
racters, in its small, whitish flowers, its short and rather broad 
capsule and its wet habitat. As R. Brown had applied the name 
paludosa to another species (from Australia), R. Wettstein in his 
monograph (1896, p. 151) altered the name of Townsend’s plant 10 
E. scottica Wettst. (more correctly spelt scotica), and under this name 
the plant has gone since (e. g. by Townsend, Monograph of the Bri- 
tish species of Euphrasia, Journ. of Botany, 1897, p. 425, and Eu- 
phrasia scotica, Journ. of Botany, 1903, p. 57). 
Wettstein considers E. scotica to be very near E. minima and 
says (l.c. p.171), that the only difference of importance lies in the 
length of the capsule in proportion to the calyx, but adds that he 
does not know if this difference is constant. Shortly after Town- 
send (Monograph, p. 426) declares, that it is not constant, as he 
has found specimens of E. scotica with capsules exceeding the calyx; 
he says that »a marked distinction seems to lie in the form of the 
