TrifoUum.'] LEGUMiNOS-a;. 71 



3. * M. vulgaris (Willd,) — White-flowered MdUot 

 M. leucaniha (Koch.) M. aiha (Lam.). 

 Districts -2?- 4 -------- 



"Waste places, railway banks, &c. ; -very, rare and not 

 native. Fl. July, August. 



2 ? Salt marshes near Cork (Mr. Drummond) ; Flor, Hib. 

 (perhaps M. officinalis): Meadows in the Little Island (Mr. 

 Drummond) ; Flor. Cork (locality given for M. officinalis in 

 Mr. Drummond's list). — 4. Abundantly for two summers 

 along embankments by a newly-made road, near Camolin, 

 Wexford (Mr. J. Morrison) ; /. G. 



Like the former, quite uncertain in its localities, and 

 scarcely to be considered naturalized, except upon the sup- 

 position that the seeds remain for many years dormant in 

 the ground. But it is likely that both species spring, in most 

 cases, from freshly imported seeds. 



TBIFOLIUM Linn. 

 1. T. pratense (Linn.) — Red Clover. 

 Districts 123456789 10 11 12 

 Lat. 51°-56°. Throughout Ireland. 

 Type in Great Britain, British. 

 Meadows and pastures ; common. Fl. May to September, 



2. T. medium (Linn.) — Zigzag, or Mountain Clover. 

 Districts 12-45--89-1112 

 Lat. 51°-56°. From South to North of Ireland. 

 Type in Great Britain, British. 



Hilly pastures and rocky places ; not common. Fl. Jime 

 to August. 



1 and 2. About Cork; Flor. Cork. But rare in the south ; 

 I. G. — 2. Neai-Carrick-on-Suir; Jfiss^'. Gn«6&. Mill Island, 

 Fermoy, rare ; Mr. T. Chandlee. — 4. Banks near the sea at 

 Eockfield, Wicklow ; D. M. — 5. Near Ballitore ; I. O. 

 Ballinascorney Gap, in the Dublin Mountains ; Mr. D. Orr. 

 Fields in the Dublin Mountains, and at their base; Wade 

 Dull. — 8. On the shore of Lough CuUin ; A. G. M.—Q. Near 

 Foxford, Mayo; A. G> M. — 11. Ballyshannon, and Mount 



