Mr. Winch's Flora of Northumberland, fyc. 



133 



ADDENDA, 



Containing Plants and Habitats ascertained since the preceding Pages 



were printed. 



PART I. 



Veronica montana, Page 2, Genus 6, No. 7- 

 In the woods at Ward re w, N., abundant. 



Utricularia intermedia, P. 2, G. 8, No. 2. 



In a bog near Crag Lake, N. — Mr. J. Thompson, 

 Sp. 

 U. minor, P. 2, G. 8, No. 3. 

 In ditches on Baron House Bog, about a mile from 

 Wardrew, N. 



Iris fcetidissima, P. 3, G. 16, No. 2. 



In a wood to the north of Sunderland Bridge, near 

 Rushyford, D. — Mr. Backhouse. 



Scirpus paucijlorus, P. 3, G. 1 9, No. 2. 



By the Irthing near GMsland, N. 

 S.fluitans, P. 3, G. 19, No. 3. 



In Bromley Lake, N. — Mr. J. Thompson. 



Eriophorum pubescent a., P. 4, G. 21, No. 3. 



Near Bourn House, in the neighbourhood of Ridley 

 Hall, N. — Mr. John Thompson, Sp. 



Sagina maritima, P. 11, G. C5,No. 2. 



On the coast near Hartley Bates, N. 

 S. apetala, P. 11, G. 05, No. 3. 



On the coast at Newbiggin and Near Hartley, N. 



Myosotis repens. Creeping Water Scorpion-grass, 

 P. 11, G. 68, No. 6. 

 Eng. Bot. 2703 ; Berwick Flora, ii. 274 ; Hook. 

 Br. Fl. 83, under M. palustris ; M. scorpioides, Al- 

 pine variety ; Northumberland and Durham 

 Guide, i. 18. 

 By the Irthing, on the moors above Gilsland, and by 

 the rivulet near the summit of Cheviot, N. In the 

 vale below Langley Ford, and in Horncliff Dene. 

 — Dr. G. Johnston. On the moors near Redpath, 

 N.«— W. C. Trevelyan, Esq. By the High Force, 

 and on VViddy Bank, D. — Mr. Backhouse. 

 This plant requires too long a specific character to 

 be a very good species. — See Eng. Bot. Sowerby's 

 drawing in that work appears to me to be very faith- 

 ful, and the yellowish hue of the herbage true to 

 nature. Is it not a moorland variety of M. palus- 

 tris ? 

 Primula farinosa, P. 13, G. 77, No. 2. 

 On bogs near Chollerford Bridge N. 



Viola lutea, P. 14, G. 8G, No. C. 



The blue variety, on Wall-Town Crags, N. 

 Atropa Belladonna, P. 15, G. 90, No. 1. 



On the banks of a rivulet which enters the Tweed at 

 Horncliff, N Mr. H. Carr, in Berwick Flora. 



VOL. II. M 



CEnanthe crocata, Page 19, Genus 122, No. 4. 



By Dr. Hooker's remarks in his British Flora, at p. 

 123, my attention has been recalled to a plant of 

 common occurrence on the banks of Tyne and the 

 other rivers in this neighbourhood, which, from 

 Smith's description, and Sowerby's figure at 2213, of 

 the English Botany, and in the Medical Botany, t. 

 267, 1 had considered as the Hemlock Water Drop- 

 wort, overlooking the circumstance, that (Enanlhe 

 crocala has a yellow juice. Lamarck and De Candolle, 

 in their Flora of France, Woodville, in the Medical 

 Botany, and Dr. Withering, in his Arrangement of 

 British Plants, make no mention of this yellow 

 fluid, but Sprengel, in his edition of the Systema 

 Vegetabilium, i. 889, when speaking of the plant 

 says, " Succo luteo venenoso scatet ; " and when he 

 describes the succeeding plant, (Enanthe apiifolia, 

 adopted from Brotero's F'lora Lusitanica, he adds 

 to a description which, with the exception of the 

 stem being smooth instead of furrowed, might 

 answer for either species, " Succo nullo peculiari 

 gaudet." Certain it is, that in this particular, the 

 Water Dropwort of our district resembles the Por- 

 tuguese plant, but whether it be identically the 

 same, I cannot take upon me to say for want of au- 

 thenticated specimens of the Celery-leaved Water 

 Dropwort. 



Galanthus nivalis, P. 21, G. 145, No. 1. 

 In the dene at Halton Castle, N. 



Narcissus Pseudo-narcissus, P. 2 1 , G. 1 40, No. 2. 

 Near Chillingham, N. — Mrs. Langhorne, in Berwick 

 Flora. 



Allium Schcenoprasum, P. 22, G. 147, No. 5. 



This plant, which is notenumerated in Ray's Synop- 

 sis of British Species, grows in considerable abun- 

 dance on the flat Basaltic rocks between the Roman 

 Station at Wall-Town and the Crags, near an an- 

 cient well called the King's Well, N. 

 Ornithogalum luteum, P. 22, G. 149, No. 1. 



In woods at Halton Castle, N. — Miss Atkinson, of 

 Carlisle. 

 Convallaria mulliflora, P. 22, G. 151, No. 3. 

 Near Stanmngton Bridge, N. — Mr. R. B. Bowman. 

 Probably naturalized in that locality. 

 Juncus lampocaipus Ii, P. 23, G. 153, No. 12. 



Hooker, Fl. Brit. 162 ; J. nigritcllus, Eng. Bot. 



2043. 

 Near the Bourn House, three quarters of a mile south 

 of Ridley Hall, and in Lipwood Moss, two miles 

 north of Lipwood, N. — Mr. John Thompson, Sp. 



m 



