ANGLESEY AND CARNARVONSHIRE PLANTS 1838 
Anglesey, teste Herr Freyn. The type occurs near Llyn Idwal, at 
ber, &c., and I found it at the Stack. Rocks, Holyhead, in 1884. 
*Saponaria Vaccaria L. By the railway at Aber, Carnarvonshire; 
@ casual. 
S. officinalis L. +8. About five miles from Pwlheli. 
*Silene dichotoma Ehrh. In a-.clover field near Holyhead, 
Anglesey ; a casual. 
S. anglica L. Near Dulas Bay, Anglesey. 
tLychnis alba x dioica. Near Deganway, Carnarvonshire. 
drenaria verna L. tvar. montana (Fenzl ap. Ledeb. Fl. Ross. 1, 
349) sub-var. glandulosa Rouy & Fouc. Flore de France, iii. 269, is 
the prevailing form on the cliffs of Cwm Idwal and Clogwyn Du yr 
Arddu. ‘Plante presque entiérement pubescente-glanduleuse.” 
*Sagina ciliata Fries tvar. ambigua (Lloyd) Corbiére. At Bodor- 
gan, Anglesey, and Aber, Carnarvonshire, teste Freyn; N.C. R. for 
Anglesey. 
Herr Freyn suggests the name Sagina ciliata var. filicaulis 
(Jord.) Corbiére for a plant gathered at Aber, but I should rather 
put it under S. apetala. 
Buda rupestris Druce. Great Orme’s Head, Holyhead, Anglesey. 
*Montia rivularis Gmel. (M. fontana var. major All.). In ditches 
oo Bodorgan, Anglesey; near Llanberris and Aber, Carnarvon- 
shire. 
Elantine hexandra DC. tvar. sessiliflora Druce, Fl. Berks. p. 105. 
vs with the type in Llyn Padarn, but very rare; Carnarvon- 
shire. 
Lavatera arborea L. Abersoch. 
and at Pwlheli, Carnarvonshire. : 
» maritimum L’Hér. Ascends to 500 ft. on the Orme’s Head. 
“Impatiens glandulifera Royle. Escape from cultivation at Aber, 
and on waste ground at Conway. 
Genista tinctoria LL. Abundant I 
Llwigy, Anglesey. 
le as & , 
nibbling the branches so long as they are within their reach, but 
the uppermost ones spread out in the ordinary manner; the effect 
] h dd. and Penrhos 
y ’ 
Ononis repens Li. tvar. inermis Lange. Occurs plentifully on 
Aberfiraw Common, Anglesey. This is doubtless the locality cited 
in Rep. of Bot. Exch. Club for 1882, where ‘‘Mona”’ was suggested 
to be the Isle of Man, but—as Dillenius was the original authority 
for its occurrence “in Insul Mona,” and as he only visited 
Anglesey—we may confidently identify his locality with the Wels 
island. +It also occurs on the sands near Pwlheli, Carnarvonshire. 
