‘FIRST RECORDS OF BRITISH FLOWERING PLANTS’ 413 
Hab. Uganda, Mabira Forest; Z. Brown, 473, in Herb. Mus. 
Brit. [Also at Kew from Toro, Kibale Forest: Dawe, 508.) 
Arbor grandis. Internodia + 2 em. long. Folia 13-21 em. 
long., 5-9-5 cm. lat.; costs sec. ascendenti-patentes juxta mar- 
§inem arcuate ; reticulum satis densum, pag. sup. facile aspectabile, 
pag. inf. difficile etiam sub lente ; petioli 15-25 cm. long. Pedi- 
celli 6 mm. long., crassiusculi. Alabastra (sicca) 3 mm. diam. 
Calycis Segmenta circa 4x4 mm. Corolla tota 4:5 mm 
ng-; hujus lobi circa 1:5 mm. long., margine sericei. Fila- 
menta (pars libera) et anther fere 2 mm. long. Stylus crassus, 
1-5 mm. long. 
Nearly allied to C. albidum G. Don from West Africa, but 
‘FIRST RECORDS OF BRITISH FLOWERING PLANTS,’ 
By W. A. Crarxe, F.1.S. 
Ir will be known to those interested in the subject that the 
list of extracts under the above title which appeared in this 
the Editor of this Journal and Mr. Druce. Mr. F. H.. Davey, 
whose excellent Flora of Cornwall has just appeared, also kindiy 
called my attention to some early Cornish records which I had 
overlooked. 
In recent years many alterations have been made in nomen- 
clature, but I have made no attempt to bring the list up to date 
in that respect. 
RANUNCULUS TRIPARTITUS DC, The plant of E. B. Suppl. 2946 
was, it appears, R. intermedius Knat (f. lutarius Bouvet); but 
j tae: d near Cork, and by Mr. 
R. V. Tellam on “Innes Moor, Roche, E. ornwall,”” Bot. Loc. 
Rec. Club Rep. for 1876. See also Journ. Bot. 1877, 209, and 
1878, 38. 
Add R. turartus Bouvet in Bull. Soc. Scient. Angers 96 (1874). 
1848. “R. innominatus” of L. Cat. ed. 2. “Near Claremont 
House, Surrey,” H. B. Suppl. 2946 (as L. tripartitus DC.). 
Add FuMmaria occrpenTA.is Pugsley in Journ. Bot. 1904, 218. 
1904. Found by Mr. H. W. Pugsley at Penzance and elsewhere 
in Cornwall in 1902. Journ. Bot. J.c. 
JOURNAL oF Borany,—Vor, 47. [Nov. 1909.] 2H 
