ADDITIONAL NOTES, ETC. 495 



coast would seem very likely to produce a plant which is 

 certainly found in Anglesea and Caernarvon, in Cumber- 

 land and Wigton. 



900. Statice caspia, vol. ii. p. 308. 



In the line of area No. [2] should have been No. [3], as 

 it stands for the county of Kent, in the province of Thames, 

 afterwards enumerated for this species, although as an 

 erroneous record. On the coast of Lincolnshii'e I saw S. 

 Limonium La gi-eat plenty, often very diminutive, but no 

 example of S. caspia or S. binervosa. The change of name 

 is explained in the British Flora, editions 5 and 6. 



902. Plantago media, vol. ii. p. 309. 



Province 9 may be added in the area. I saw this 

 species spai'ingly near Chester in 1850 ; and two stations 

 are mentioned for it in Buxton's Manchester Plants. Mr. 

 SjTne found P. lanceolata very common in Orkney, but 

 saw no example of P. media, which conj&i-ms the sugges- 

 tion that Lowe's list intended the species P. lanceolata 

 under name ' P. media.' 



903. Plantago lanceolata, vol. ii. p. 310. 



Add Orkney to the north limit, on authority of Mr. 

 Syme, as above mentioned. 



904. Plantago maritima, vol. ii. p. 311. 



The provincial generality may be now given with confi- 

 dence ; the blank for the Trent ha\TLng been filled up by 

 my own quest for the plant on the coast of Lincoln in 

 1851, where it is plentiful enough. It attains to the in- 

 ferarctic zone on Ben Nevis, at a height of probably 600 

 yards, and in a mean temperature as low as 40. I should 

 suj)pose also the same or gi'eater elevation in Strath Affaric, 

 judging by the observation of Mr. John Ball, that it ex- 

 tends upwards to the " alpine " region. 



Xd. Plantago Psyllium, vol. ii. p. 312. 



This species, or a near ally, appears to have been found 



