PLANT NOTES FROM SUTHERLAND AND CANTIRE 801 
the Ne: wad aoe geome” “‘a curiously na es 
(fide E. F. *H, murorum L. var. premio: roe 
Canisp, at msn 2000 ft. = aisikiaige looking neat plant with 
sinuous stem and crisp dark-edged leaves. — H. c@esio-murorum 
Lindeb. a Sarde “T think H. cesio-murorum Lindeb. with 
Frie SLisaaayh. 8 Scotica Wettst. Inchnadam h. 
€itieanithos major EKhrh. Cultivated field, Inchnadamph. 
fruit could be found, so it is uncertain to which segregate it belongs. 
—R. Crista-galli L. var. a ai ay! i F. B. White. Canisp, : at 
Bot. 1891, p. 118), named subsequently by Prof. Lange R. angusti- 
folia Kooh: only these Inchnadamph specimens are much smaller, 
which may be accounted for by their growing usually amongst short 
sheep- re turf. The rs description of f. angustifolia runs 
as follows in Gmel. Fl. Bad, ii. p. 669 :—*: Caule brachiato ramo- 
pears “foliis sessilibus, sitaeeince angustis obtuse serratis, calycibus 
ris uth is 
Ww o scarcely 1 line wide, 
1 in. long, patent, bracts ovate-acuminate, sharply serrate, more 
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longly pointed; flowers terminal on stem and branches, in a 
subspicate-racemose head; calyx and corolla twice as sma 
habitat, always stony mountains; “tii of flowering (July a 
August 
Pinguicula lusitanica L. Glas Bhei 
Oxyria digyna Hill. Inchnadansyis ‘tot slopes of Canisp. 
iw her 500 ft. 
Juncus trifidus L. Canisp, north side. 
Carex rupestris All. Quite plentiful on limestone cliffs imme 
diately behind Inchnadamph, and was also seen in the locality 
mentioned in Journ. Bot. 1891, p. 116. — C. oe a Good. Canisp, 
at 2000 ft.—C. Goodenowii J. Gay: var. nears (I. M. Fries). By 
the Loanan River, Inchnada — C. pilulifera L var. longt- 
bracteata Lange. Glas Bheinu 
*Deschampsia flecuosa Trin. var. montana Hook. fil. Canisp, at 
2700 ft. 
