914 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
strictum Fr. Raehills Glen. A form or var. cha i nl cano- 
and by the adjoining Evan Water. — Obs. e saw nothing o 
H. nigresens, she a or Lanqwellense, nitidum, ciliatum, or 
angustatum, “oo have been reported. On a hawkweed which 
grew sparingly w h H. duriceps var. cravoniense on rocks by the 
Kinnel Water in Rachiils Glen, W. R. Linton wrote ret T believe 
hich in my 
boo wrongly placed with oxyodus (oxyodus being a Silos 
headed plant).” It agrees closely with specimens received from 
W.R.L. 
Taraxacum palustre DC. In an aggregate sense this i is common 
on the hills up to 2000 ft. (I suspect that it may in part be 
T. spectabile Dahlst.; but no specimens were taken, and I have 
not seen that segregate. 
Jasione escte. L. var. *major Mert. & Koch. Old Edinburgh 
Road, about two miles from Moffat. 
Campanula latifolia L. Raehills Glen; very local, but evidently 
nati 
Dirois minor L. Duff Kinnel Burn. 
Euphrasia Rostkoviana Hayne. Not uncommon i 
— *. scottica Wettst. Frequent in boggy ground, 
ascending to at least 1200 ft.—*H. curta Wetitst. var. glabrescens 
Wettst. Beeftub; Correifron; Black’s Hope; probably general 
on the hills. 
*Rhinanthus soars Druce. Sparingly on the cliffs of Black’s 
Hope and Corr 
Welsman prtinss L. var. *hians Druce. Abundant in 
Raehills Glen; Midlaw Burn, at about 1300 ft. Mr. Johnstone 
informed us that this was the usual low-ground form of the 
trict 
Pingui cula vulgaris L. var. *bicolor Nordstedt. Black’s Hope, 
Midlaw Burn, &c.; often characteristic, but intermediates between 
aha caprea L., S. cinerea L. ehills Glen. —*S. aurita x 
phylicifolia. Kinnel Burn, a female plant —S. phylicifolia L. 
Kinnel Burn, &c.— S. nigricans Sm. urn descending from 
Saddle Yoke to the Black’s Hope Burn; Tail Burn. In this 
latter station grew two barren bushes, which at the time were 
taken to be forms of migricans; but they are very possibly 
S. reels x nigricans, the only station in the county sed 
Lapponum being on the rocks of White Shes the drain 
from which falls into this stream. The ood, buds, and foliage 
favour such a parentage; the material, bowels does not admit 
