114 YORKSHIRE NATURALISTS UNION. 



its ordinary one, garden treatment is more likely to favour and 

 intensify its present aberration from the parent type. There are 

 other points of difference besides that of the bracts; but these 

 will be defined in their proper place. 



The other new records for 1880 are as follow. 

 The signs * and f have the usual meaning; /. e. : — 



* = Not indigenous anywhere in Britain, but now becoming 

 acclimatised. 



t = Not native in the spot where found (but naturalised) 

 although it may be truly wild in other parts of Britain. 



Clematis Vital ba Z.f Freely naturalised on the southern bank 

 of the line, a quarter of a mile west of Thorparch railway 

 station. J. Emmet! M.W. York. 



Ranunculus Lingua Z. Sharow mires near Ripon, plentiful 

 and luxuriant. H. H. Slater. M.W. York. 



R. sceleratus Z. Banks of a muddy stream flowing from 

 Stockeld Park towards Ingbarrow farm between Spofforth 

 and Wetherby. F. A. Lees. M.W. York. 



R. Lenormandi Schultz. About rills and springs at Woolley 

 Edge, near Wakefield. W, West. S.W. York. 



Aconitum Lycoctonunn Z.* A naturalised alien in the 

 wooded swamp to the back of the ruined house at Bramham 

 Park. F. A. Lees. M.W. York. 



\Funiaria de^tsiflora DC. This, recorded by Rev. H. H. Slater 

 in his "Preliminary List" for a Ripon Flora, as having 

 occurred casually on waste ground, turns out to be a ramose 

 procumbent form of F. officinalis. I have examined the 

 specimen. — F. A. L.] 



Sinapis nigra Z. On the steep bank of the Wharfe at Linton 

 bridge. F. A. Lees. M.W. York. 



Trans.Y.N.U., 18S0 (pub. 1882). Series E 



