270 REMARKS ON THE ‘CYBELE HIBERNICA.’ 
Scotland it is practically confined to the coldest parts of = higher 
granitic mountains, seldom descending below 3000 fee The 
Portrane locality for Silene yor (p. 479) in Co. Dublin, ‘though 
ete sted by Messrs. Colgan d Scully, appears to resemble those 
n the Kent and Sussex ate where it is certainly wi 
Geranium pusillum and G. rior Noe (pp. 72-3). "Why are 
these marked as doubtful natives? The latter is unquestionably 
wild on Limaatiib near L. Mask, in Mayo G. pyrenaicum occupies 
a very different position in this respec 
Medicago sylvestris (p. 483). The nate given scarcely jaasty 
the relegation of this species to the Appendix; so far as 1 kno 
(unlike M. falcata), it is not a plant of sporadic or casual ondueasgi 
Trifolium glomeratum (p. 86). A true native at Rosslare; T. 
not to be opin so at Wicklow. Lotus tenuis, aie oer 
edge 0 
murat bus obscurus (p. aa. Y noticed this piepashe bramble in 
considerable quantity near Wexford, on a second 
} 1 Add: IX 
vis 
osa involuta (p. 118), bodies I Be be places near 
Clonbur, Mayo pimpinellifolia x tomentosa). Too many absurd 
** English” nam » such as‘ owe oe Rose,’”’ encumber the 
caus atio 
Baloo. ae and dasyphylium (p. 134). These are esi as 
if certainly introduced. Considering that the first is frequent in 
W. France, Spain and Portugal (it is truly wild in See re 
: f 
that the second (also a plant of S e) was thought by the 
discoverers to be oun in two of its Co. Cork stations, a little 
more reserve might not have been amiss. The present Editors, 
however, have only ieee Mr. A. G. More’s exam le 
pilobium Lamyt (p. 489). The Cork specimen determined by 
Haussknecht is in the British Museum Herbarium. I see no 
ground for assuming it to have been a ‘‘ eet ” particularly as it 
was associated with RF, jee um; in §.E. and §.W. England it is 
certainly wi 
(Einanthe pimpinelioids 2 Se A frequent coast-plant of 
gland, S.W. Fra a ) \ 7; 
é 
p. Al 
— omnes iments, this might well have sie retained asa a Be 
in 
eee nobilis (p, 183). Add: VII. Near Maliinents elas 
nock Drin. To the best of my recollection, Mr. Levinge inform 
_  Cnicus koe (p. 194). Having seen the L. Ow el plant grow- 
ing with the pe sie parents, I feel satisfied that it is a hybrid 
(C. palustris . 
aes ‘orsunaie (p. 199) is more open to the suspicion of 
