SHORT NOTES. 125 
‘ 
Aspidium Aculeatum, Polypodium vulgare. The above additions to 
the flora of Co. 42 were found within a mile or two of the town of 
Brecon, by my daughter, who has also given me a list of other new 
records from the same locality, but I wait till specimens are sent 
before recording these. —ALFRED 
Acrostis nigra With. iv Gamerrpcesaire.—tIn 1881 I gathered 
two specimens of Agrostis, near Chatteris; one of these w 
dly sent me typical examples, collected by Mr. 
agnall in Warwickshire. The Rushbeach plant I re- 
ferred, less doubtfully, to A. alba L., but this agrees exactly with 
Mr. Bagnall’s specimens. Perhaps these trivial details may serve 
to guide other field botanists to the discovery of new localities 
for a plant which is likely widely spread, but passed over as one OF 
other of our more common species. ALFRED Fryer. 
Carex trinervis Degland, IN Enenanp.— With Mr. W. W. 
Reeves I was looking over some duplicates from Norfolk, belonging 
to Mr. H. G. Glasspoole, when I found among them four specl- 
mens of a Carex that I at once saw was very near C. trinervis 
of Degland, if not that plant. Careful examination since, of the 
specimens, with others, from the west of France and the Hast 
* which he ki 
Dns Phen las oe ne ee 
NOTICES OF BOOKS. 
Taz Annual Report of the Belfast Naturalists’ Field Club for 
1882-83 contains a, Supplement to a List of Mosses of the North- 
East of Ireland,’ by Mr. 8. A. Stewart. 
