244 Moss Flora of Hagg Wood, near Htiddersfield. 



Eurhynchium confertuin Milde. Distribution general, common on walls, 



on stones, and on tree stumps, generally in damp and shady 



places ; a good fruiter. 

 Plagiotheciutn elegans Sull. Distribution general, common on walls, on 



boulders, and on the ground ; never found in fruit. 

 P. denticulatmn B. and S. Not common, on a rock face. 

 P. silvaticum B. and S. Not common, on stones, on the ground. 

 Amblystegium Juratzkanum Schp. Not common, on stones. 

 A. filicinum De Not. Not common, on the ground. 

 Hypnum fliiitans L. Rare, floating on pondwater. 

 H . ciipressiforme L. Not common, rock face, damp and shady. 

 H . cuspidatum L. Not uncommon, rock face, and on the, ground in 



damp and shady places. 



HUDDERSFIELD DISTRICT MoSSES. 



Dry Clough House Conservatory, Crosland Moor. 



Catharinea undiilata Web. and Mohr. Flower-pot. 

 Pottia truncaiula Lindb. On a wood slab, in fruit. 

 Leptobryiim pyrijorme Wils. Flower pot, sterile ; also in fruit. 



Wooldale Nurseries, Thongsbridge. 



Funaria hygrometrica Sibth. Flower-pot, in fruit. 

 Leptobryitm pyriforme Wils. Inside wall, ' Alpine ' house, in fruit. 

 Hypnum ochraceum var. B. flaccidum Milde. Inside a stone ^water- 

 trough. 



Wliitley Hall conservatory, near Huddersfield. 



Leptobryum pyriforme Wels. Conseryatory wall, inside. 

 Amblystegium Juratzkanum- Schp. Conservatory wall, inside. 



Quarries in the rough rock at Shooters Nab, near Meltham. 



Brachyodus trichodes Fiirn. 

 Schistosiega osmimdacea Mohr. 



Hade Edge Moor, near Holm firth. 



Dicranum majus Turn. 

 Philonotis fontana Brid. 



Dunford Bridge, near Holmfirth. 

 Webera albicans Schp. In a marshy place, in fruit. 



The Proceedings of the Liverpool Botanical Society, 1916-1918, have 

 recently appeared, and by the aid of summaries of the Council's reports, 

 and of the general and field meetings during the period named, the 

 Society prevents a break in the continuity of the record of its doings. 

 The Society includes among its membership the names of many important 

 botanists who have contributed papers to the meetings. As frontispiece 

 is a portrait of W. G. Travis, president during the period named. 



Among the many valuable contents of The Transactions of the 

 Entomological Society of London, issued in April, we notice ' The Full 

 Growir Larva of Lycaeva euphemiis Hb.,' by T. A. Chapman ; ' TI10 

 Anthomyid (^enera Hammomyia and Hylephila of J^ondani (Diptcra),' 

 by J . H. Collin ; The Interpretation of Insectan and Myriopodan Stnicturcs 

 through a Comparison with the Structures of Crustacea,' by G. C. Cramp- 

 ton ; and ' Description of the Female of Chiastopsylla godfreyi Waterst., 

 with Notes on the Genus,' by James Waterston. 



Naturalist 



