ADDITIONAL NOTES, ETC. T)!! 



Pascoe having seen a dried specimen that had been 

 picked in the county. 



1042. Epipactis ensifolia, vol. ii. p. 420. 



In reference to the remark about different observers 

 having assigned the localities of Methven Wood to differ- 

 ent species, the Rev. W. W. Newbould says, " At Good- 

 wood E. ensifolia and E. grandiflora grow together : is it 

 so at Methven ? " The query merits a reply by some 

 visitor of the station. 



1045. Orchis Morio, vol. ii. p. 422. 



The south limit may be extended mto Cornwall, on au- 

 thority of Mr. Pascoe. According to Hooker's Flora 

 Scotica, tliis species is " frequent " in Scotland ; but that 

 indication was perhaps only copied without acknowledg- 

 ment from Lightfoot's Flora Scotica ; and if so, it is of 

 course no second or confirmatory authority in support of 

 Lightfoot himself. 



1049. b. Orchis fusca, vol. ii. p. 424. 



The Province of Channel [2] and county of Sussex may 

 be excluded for the present. See Bot. Gaz. ii. p. 98. 

 Mr. Carriugton reports (Bot. Soc. Edinb.) this species as 

 having been found near Lincoln ; a habitat which will re- 

 quii'e confirmation. 



1050. Orchis hircina, vol. ii. p. 425. 



It would seem by recent reports that this species may 

 still be found very sparingly in Kent, " in the neighbour- 

 hood of the old station mentioned in Sowerby's English 

 Botany " (Mr. WoUaston, in Phytol. iv. 169) ; and that it 

 has also occurred in the parish of Great Glemham, near 

 Saxmundham in Suffolk (Mr. Bloomfield, in Bot. Gaz. i. 

 327 and Phytol. iii. 942). The latter locality adds the 

 province of Ouse to the area, if it can be relied upon. 



1051. Orchis pyramidalis, vol. ii. p. 426. 



Province 9 may be added in the area, on authority of 



