ON SOME RARE PLANTS IN COUNTY DONEGAL. 233 
Island of St. Eustace, Masson! There is a specimen from Kew 
Gardens in 1786 at the British Museum, and one from the gins 
Botanic Garden in 1805 in the Smithian Herbarium. ight’s 
689, from Eastern Cuba, differs from we type by shorter pint 
narrower leaves, and much smaller bra 
(To be aor 
ON SOME RARE PLANTS IN COUNTY DONEGAL. 
By Henry Cutcuester Hart, B.A. 
« the summer of the past year and spring of the present 
one . 1881) I was enabled to make further botanical explorations in 
this county. The results of these I now offer to your readers in 
continuation of my former papers upon this subject published in 
his Journal. 
The following plants are additions to the eisai of POneaE +. #5 
District 11 in Moore and More’s ‘ Cybele Hibernic 
Ranunculus peltatus, Fries. Stachys Baia Benth 
R. heterophyllus, Bab. Primula veris, 
runus insititia, Linn. Rumea Figaolnpathany Huds. 
Pyrus Aria, Sm. * Polygonum Bistorta, Linn. 
* Dipsacus pelea estris, Lin t Ulmus montana, With. 
Hieracium umbellatum, ost " Potamogeton heterophyllus,Schreb. 
Bartsia viscosa, Linn. Carex teretiuscula, Good. 
In the following list those plants the localities of which do not 
enter into my formerly defined district of North-Western Donegal, 
I have marked with the capital letter “D”; “F,” as before, 
signifies Fanet. 
Thalictrum alpinum, L. an altitude of 1900 feet, about 
one mile west of Lough paibie ; on Lavagh More on both s 
and north sides; and on Silver These localities lie on the 
Bluestack or Croagh Gorm range in the south-west of Donegal. 
I have previously recorded this rare alpine plant from the Posaed 
len. D. 
Ranunculus a eectey Fries. Marshy ground between Inch Road 
station and Burnfoot. 
Bs ner ls Bab. Near the last, by the railway. 
R. scelera Salt-marshes at Templecroney, west of 
ey: oe ground between the two embankments at Inch 
Trollius eur opaus, L. There are two distinct sets of habitats 
given for this most interesting Donegal plant, in the ‘ Cybele 
i i ough Garten,” and the other, 
near Raph e wrongly groupe r 
they shoal be “ Lough Garten” and ‘*Convoy and Raphoe”’ ; 
the latter two places are but a couple of miles apart, while they 
are both fifteen or twenty miles from Lough Garten. In the 
