PLANTS OF PEMBROKESHIRE 857 
subinflata, panicula + lobata, spiculis bifloris rarissime trifloris 
c. 4 mm. longis pubescentibus ‘puberalisve raro fere glabris, oe 
sepius acutis (nee acuminatis), glumellis haud raro aristulatis. 
flosculis e glumellis parum excedentibus.’ 
horn, Elgin; Sands of Barry; near Arbroath, Forfar ; hake 
Garten, hassetcay Arthur’s Seat, Edinburgh ; Stow Wood, 
Oxon; Lydd, New Romney, eee near the Lizard, Cornwall. 
great rae of most of the aioe It often vividly recalls 
K. albescens, but otherwise es a series of forms is united with 
gracilis, This is well shown in my series from Lydd Shingle. It 
is not impossible that it 5 i appears as a hybrid (gracilis x 
albescens). 
K. gracilis in England is found by meeoernee ™ dry, hilly, 
chalky, or caleareous: ground, meadows, ete. ; escens and 
arenaria (which belongs to it) on the whole is a oes of sea 
n the majority of cases cannot be separated from K. gracilis, and 
frequently might well represent a mungyee ot f bot 
Dr. Domin says that as a whole the British Keleria are very 
critical, and some forms occur which he has not met with in his 
investigation of a very large amount of material from all parts of 
the gl 
PLANTS OF PEMBROKESHIRE (v.-c. 45). 
Brké. ¥. ren M.A. 
Tuere h 
this ss (1884, 43; 1901, 52; 1903, 245) dealing | with t 
Flora of N.W. Pembrokeshire, and more particularly with the 
neighbourhood of St. David’s, and yet the botany of the district 
does not seem at all exhausted. I stayed aoe eleven days last 
August, spjoring the hospitality of the one i 
f s plants not previously STE including a few 
ceed Rubi)" a recorded for the county. Most of the species 
; e 
in this list, Haverfordwest (the nearest railway station) is sixteen 
miles, Fishguard and Goodwick seventee n miles, and Newgale eight 
miles away; the remainder are within three or four miles of St. 
David's. An asterisk is prefixed to reputed county records. 
