122 CRITICAL NOTES ON SOME SPECIES OF CERASTIUM. 
In a medium capsule I counted nineteen seeds. Named after 
ishsiatent, the botanist of the Crimea, who, like Georgi, referred 
his 5 semper s to C. repens. In the specimens examined in Herb. 
Mus. Bri Sghich were three on a single sheet from Herb. Auerswald, 
the only eens which had split were certainly not exserted beyond 
the mao 
. C. prrtorum Kit. ap. esp in Linnea, xxxii. 525 (1863). A 
species near C. arvense: a much smaller plant with usually bifloral 
stems. Found by mountain cube in the county of Szepes, in 
rornacth 
48. EPHAROPHYLLUM Ledeb. Fl. Rossica, i. 408 (1842) = 
G. ng. 
49. C, BLEPHAROSTEMON Fisch. et Mey. ap. Hohenack. Enum. PI. 
a in Bull. Soc. Nat. Mose. 1838, 408; Boiss. Fl. Orient. i. 
722 (syn.); = C. longifoliun. Not mentioned in Grenier’s mono- 
me ise Derives its name from the ciliated filaments. 
c 
the government of Baku, in the bap us. 
0. C. Borssrart Gren. Monogr. Cerast. 67 (1841) = C. Gib- 
ein Boiss.:(1838). The latter must stand as the name for 
the speci 
C. sompycinum Schur, Enum. Pl. Transsilv. 123 (1866) ; 
hae nsp. Fl. Eur. 108 (1878) ; Jacl Ind. Kew. i. 483 (1893) 
= CU, alpinun oe is an exampl the unnecessary multipli- 
gathered i placed them in ae herbarium, and, without any 
serious attempt at discrimination, have dubbed them with new 
names, and there left them. Subsequently, with further ex ami- 
nation of materials for his Enum. Pl. Transsilvania, he considerately 
logical encumbrances are sie brea in evidence in the work 
ntio Tt i 
synonymy by publishing herbarium- ads which have little or 
no connection with the Ficcovit of the species, whose distribution 
