Seat ee 
a 
SHORT NOTES AND QUERIES. bee 
n the common the very light yellowish-green of its leaves contrasts 
strikingly with the dingy tints of much of the surrounding vegetation. 
It has been supposed to have a preference for limestone, but on Bick- 
leigh Down occurs just where an elvan vein traverses slates of the 
i s 
mouth, Hereford, Worcester, and Sussex.—T, 
Frora oF Berxsurre (pp. 138— 138-140). — —The a 
informs me that the locality given for Viola hir a (p. 138 38) is in 
Surrey, and the beef College one for Jnula Pullearia (p. ‘139) 
in Hants.—James 
Prants or Unrrep States anv Evrore:—The following are the 
ca also. ba. 
Vallisneria spiralis, which appears to be absent from Northern Asia. 
Spiranthes Romanzoviana, with its single station on the Irish coast ; 
i em- 
l a 
Only two or three of them iri weet of the Musee valley. 
Narthecium is not in the list, or 
7 copenn and Atlantic American species having o detected in 
an; the gentis is unknown on the Pacific side of our ¢ontinent.— 
al the Appendix te Prof. A. Gray s Address to the American 
eaecon, 1872. | 
ay 04 SAX. 
itish Muse in Lord at Hac d, 
Hampshire. Rev. P. Roberts, 1808." — “May 28, 1818. Found in 
company with Mr, Rishon the Misseltoe growing upon the Oak about 
