8374 SHORT NOTES AND QUERIES. 
tion. I do not, however, think this probable, as the plant is not a 
likely one to be grown in gardens; an ere appears no reason, in 
the absence of evidence to the contrary, oe it should se oe con- | 
sidered indigenous in the moeelity. mentioned.—F rep. 1. War 
Hamrsurre Prants.—In company with the Rev. W. W. Spice 
and other members of the Winchester and Hampshire Scientific ‘sd 
Literary Society, I paid a visit on the 4th July to Miller’s Pond, be- 
* : : 
gula arvensis, var. oa! vulgaris, Syme, E. B. ed. iii., and Valerianella 
aurieula, S the railway embankment near Sholing Station ; 
Pinguicula lusitariiea, Linn , in abundance; Utricularia intermedia, 
—F. I. Warn 
Juncus pyemxus.—I have found this in great abundance during 
the present year in several parts of Lizard Down, extending over a 
great many acres. I send anne —James CUNNACK. 
A New Scorcn Spracnum.—I enclose specimens of pee Aus- 
tint, mbH aye which Dr. Lindberg recognised atmong a collection of 
Mosses which I made in the Island of Lewis in 1868, I had sup- 
ied the plant to be a remarkable ig of S. jpubstiinth, differmg 
so widely from the typical form of the species as to warra ant me in 
making a diagnosis of its characters. Tt is geographically interesting 
i estern 
level. —D. Mo RE.—/ Gr in Swede he species has been 
1 
ANTHOCEROS Lavis IN IreLanp-—During a visit in July to the 
south-west of Ireland with Dr. Lindberg, we found this rare species, 
not before known to grow in Ireland, in one st only near A oom? 
—D. Moorr 
Ecutnospermum Lapruta.—l aa, a specimen of this plant last 
month near the Horton railway-sta tion, near Northampton. I had 
not time to 
one cman which I have placed in the herbarium of the British 
Museu Near it was Silene noctiflora, alsa I did not observe 
else sr in the neighhourhood.—Jamus Brirre 
YPERICUM DUBIUM IN CaMBrincEsHIRE.—I enclose specimens of 
Hypericum dubium collected at Kirtling, near Newmarket, Cambridge- 
- shire. It has not, I believe, been before sirsed for this county, 
and is unmentioned i in Professor Babingtow’ s Flora. —R. A. P 
