428 



ADDITIONS. 



p. 1, before Section A. in Thalictrum., 



T. macrocarpum. Carpels inflated, with- 

 out angles or fm'rows. Pan. few-flowered. 

 Pedicels very long, one-flowered. Lower L. 

 3-4 times ternate. p. 6, 7- Central Pyr. 

 — Gr. and GoDii. 



p. 3, after Anemone Pulsatilla, 



A. montana. Koot-L. triplicato-pinnati- 

 fid. Div. linear, acute. Fl. nodding. Sep. 

 straight, turned out at the top, twice as long 

 as stamens. — Koch. Gr. and 6. describe the 

 •primary Div. of L. as placed on lony stalks, 

 but they quote Koch. p. 5. Dau. Auv. 

 Angers. Dax. Toulon, s. Tyr. 



p. 6, after Ranunculus Mcaria, 



"R. calthifolius. Stem not creeping. Root- 

 L. subrotundo-cordate, the lobes overlapping. 

 Fl.-stalk very long. Carpels hispid, p. 4, 5. 

 Fds. and vineyards. Toulon. Cors. — Gr. and 

 G., who state that in R. Ficaria the lobes of the 

 L. diverge, and that the carpels are downy. 



p. 6, after Ranunculus auricomus, 



R. demissus. Carpels nearly hairless. 

 Rec. hairless. Carpels 15-20, with a filiform, 

 recurved beak. Stem-L. tripartite. Segm. 

 lanceolate, not divergent, p. 7. Mountains. 

 Cors. — Gr. and G. 



p. 8, after Nigella arvensis, 



3ff. hispanica. Anthers apieulate. In- 

 ner Lip of Nect. lineari-lanceolate, equalling 

 outer ! Caps. 8-10, united to the top, glandu- 

 loso-rugose. a. 7, 8. s. Pr. — Gr. and G. 



p. 8, after Aquilegia alpina, 



A. Bernhardi. Spui' curved, slender, 



hardly half as long as blade of petal {in all 

 the other species they are as long, or longer). 

 L. large, twice ternate. Lts. trifid, crenate. 

 p. 6. JMonte Rotondo in Cors. — Gr. and G. 



p. 12, after Hypecoum procumbens, 



H. grandiflorum. Pod only obsciu-ely 

 jointed, marked with longitudinal ribs. Outer 

 Pet. largest, 3-lobed ; inner trifid. (Pil. with 

 a membranous expansion at the base, Benth.) 

 L. not flat on the ground. Stems ascending, 

 forming dichotomous panicles, a. 6. Lower 

 RousiUon. — Gr. and G. 



p. 13, after Corydalis acaulis, 



C. capnoides. L. trifid or tripartite, in- 

 cise. Lowest Bracts inciso-tripartite, on long 

 stalks. Spur as long as coroUa. Seeds hooded 

 by the caruncle, a. 6, 7. In rich but stony 

 ground. Pustherthal in s. Tyrol. 



p. 15, after Iberis amara, 



X. bicorymbifera. Rac. a sort of double 

 corymb, with intermediate abortive flowers. 

 Silicic winged, as broad at the summit as in 

 the middle, ending in two terminal lobes, 

 which exceed the style. L. numerous at the 

 top of the barren shoots ; all pinnatifid, on 

 long stalks, b. ? Mende. — Gr. and G. 



p. 16, add note to Lepidium Smithii: 



Gr. and G. consider this a var. of L. hetero- 

 phyUum ; but the silicles are not always round- 

 ed at the base, and the terminal wing is very 

 narrow and often wanting. 



p. 16, after Lepidium Smithii, 



Ii. Villarsii. Silicle oval, the wing form- 

 ing about \ of its whole length, rounded at 

 base; stalk smooth. Style exsert. AH L. 

 undivided. " Souche vivace, verticale, inde- 

 terminee, ecaiUeuse." p. Gap. — Gr. and G. 

 These authors describe the root of L. hirtum 

 in the same words ; while in L. heterophyllmn 

 it is, " Souche vivace, determinee, non ecail- 

 leuse, renflee et noueuse superieurement." In 

 L. hirtum the wing is \, in L. Villarsii \, in 

 L. heterophyUum \, and I may add in L. 

 Smithii not \, of whole length of the silicle. 



p. 17, after Lepidium ruder ale, 



L. virgmicum. Silicle round, nearly 

 flat, with a very narrow wing, shorter than 

 pedicel. Stigma sessile. Pet. oblongo-cunei- 

 form, twice as long as sepals. Lower L. 

 obovate, toothed or pinnatifid ; upper lanceo- 

 late, serrate, a. 5, 6. Bayonne. — Gr. and G. 



p. 18, add note to Alyssum alpestre -. 



A. robertianum, Gr. and Godr., seems to 

 be a var. of this, distinguished by larger flow- 

 ers and seed-vessels. 



p. 23, after Brassica balearica, 



B. insularis. " L. numerous, crowded at 

 the base of the flowering-stalks, and at the 



