80 THE BOTANY OF BERMUDA. 
Pimpinella laterifolia, Link. Burnet saxifrage. 
A weed. 
Ferula communis, Linn. (Leniculum vulgare, Gertn.) Fennel. 
In gardens; ‘sweet fennel”; probably‘the Feniculwm dulce of botan- 
ists; is mentioned among seeds sent out in 1616, 
F, glauca. 
An ornamental species. Introduced from Cambridge Botanical Gar- 
dens, 1874. 
Apium leptophyllum, F. M. Fool’s parsley. 
Naturalized, and found commonly in waste places. 
Apium graveolens, Linn. Celery. 
Cultivated at Mount Langton, and of excellent quality. The tempera 
ture of the soil at 12 inches’ depth ranged from 58° to 70° during the 
season of its growth. 
Petroselinum sativum, Hoffm. Parsley. 
Cultivated, and occasionally exported to New York. (Apiwm Petro- 
selinum, Linn.) 
LIV.—ARALIACEA. 
Hedera helix, Linn. Common ivy. 
Hardly naturalized, and grown with some difficulty, but not uncom- 
mon, and prized for decorative purposes. 
Aralia guilfoylia, Hort. 
Received from Cambridge, Mass., 1874, and living 1877. 
LV.—CoORNACEZ. 
Cornus stricta? Lam. Stiff cornel or Dogwood. 
A plant received from the United States appeared to thrive in a 
shrubbery at Mount Langton. 
LVI.—CAPRIFOLIACEZ. 
Caprifolium Italicum, R. S. Honeysuckle, cultivated. 
C. sempervirens, Michx. Trumpet honeysuckle. 
In gardens, but not luxuriant. 
Lonicera xylosteum, Linn. Fly honeysuckle. 
Given by J. M. Jones. 
Viburnum Tinus, Linn. Laurestinus. 
