227 
NOTES ON SOUTH KERRY PLANTS. 
By H. Sruart TxHompson. 
Durine a short visit in July to Co. Kerry, with my friend Mr. 
Arnold Eliott, several observations were made which seem worth 
u 
irifidus, Carex rigida, Agrostis canina, Festuca ovina and forma 
vivipara, Sieglingia decumbens, and Deschampsia flexuosa. Mr. 
F. N. Williams, in his interesting compilation on The High 
Alpine Flora of Britain, being a list of the flowering plants and 
=) 
v 
thousand metre plants. Slightly lower, at about 3000 ft., we got 
stony gu companion also found Sisyrinchium angustt- 
folium by Lough Caragh, where it was associated with Drosera, 
obelia _Dorimanna, and Narthecitum. This erican 
indigenous here, and Mr. Lloyd Praeger is of the same opinion. 
ne spot in the beautiful district of Caragh we saw 
Cardamine amara, which appears to be recorded only from six of 
d. Near Killarn 
cy 
the Northern Divisions of Ireland. ear ey, Orobanche 
risia viscosa, and Inula crithmoides; while of commoner plants 
Jasione montana and Cotyledon Umbilicus may be mentioned as 
characteristic of both areas. 
The Alpine Flora of the West of Ireland is interesting, partly 
because of the extraordinary way in which certain species, such as 
