350 Bennett: Notes on the Flora of Cheshire. 
acre, the vegetation of the ‘ Broad’ country in Norfolk 
especially being comprised of few — sharers 
while the numbers in some cases are immen 
sagan fae pgales lL; G:,.This is one ey our decreasing 
e notes on ap occurrence will be found in thie 
tee gee p.. 360, 4,.1808. — It séenis: to be 
entirely extinct in its eee locality ; and Mr. F. A. Lees 
seems to regard it as Ail or nearly so, in Yorkshire. 
The latest gatheri ing I ware of (other than Mr. 
Marshall’s (1896)) is sie pe “she late Mr. Beckwith in 
Salop in a new locality, whence he sent me specimens. 
As Mr. Sims (‘ Phytologist,’ 2, 576, 1858) acknowledges to 
having gathered ‘over 300 specimens in one day” in Perth, 
t must have been abundant there. 
Carex teretiuscula Ehrh. The remarks on this Carex and its 
var., p. 321-2, are amply borne out by Mr. J. Bagnell’s 
experience in Warwickshire ; and on this point the remarks 
of Mr. Watson (Cyb. Britt., Vol. 3, 107, 1852) are very 
pertinent :—‘If I rightly know that variety it occurred on 
Wimbledon Common, in Surrey, some few years ago, in 
a drying up swamp.’ 
Carex limosa L. 6. Wybunbury Moss, Herb. E. S. Marshall. 
Carex strigosa Huds. 2. I have a specimen gathered by Dr. 
od in ‘ Cotteril Clough, May 1841. 
Carex fulva Good. Fields near Stathip (?) Wood, 27, 8, 1881, 
H. Searle. I cannot read the word, it may be ‘Stirrup?’ 
aie riparia Curtis. 2. Rostherne Mere, 8, 1883, H. Searle 
: his is a variety that is probably the same as Kries * 
caaned ‘C. nutans,’ but afterwards as C. riparia var. 
obesa Fr. =var. deformis Beml. It has much’the habit and 
look of C. nutans Host. 
dorprprstanas Epigejos Roth. 3. Hedge near Bolesworth, 
g, 1860, A. Croall sp. 
Aira Pastel Weihe. Chester, Miss Potts. Top. Botany. 
Festuca uniglumis Soland. The description of the growth 
(p. 356) is very like that of F. ambigua Le Gall, and the 
date is early for it to turn brown. In St. Helen’s Spit, in the 
Isle of Wight, they both grow together, and have been 
gathered mixed, and named uniglumzs, but uniglumis is 
green! in the middle of June, when ambdigua is quite a rich 
yellow-brown. In Norfolk ambigua can be seen for some 
distance by this colouring and its gregarious growth. 
Nephrodium cristatum Rich. 6. I have a specimen gathered 
at Wybunbury Bog, roth September 1847, by Dr. J. Wood, 
and in 1875 by Dr, Fraser. 
"Naturalist, 
