NOTES ON HIGHLAND PLANTS. 109 
with a broad, shallow, muddy margin, covered with vegetation, and 
which merits a more prolonged examination than we were able to 
give. The next locality visited was Crianlarich, in Perthshire, 
whence expeditions (unfortunately intenfored with by bad weather) 
F Ben Laoigh. 
r an me b 
the E. of Crianlarich; and afterwards spent two days in Glen 
i i cali 
S on former occasion e have to express our thanks to 
ag Arthur Bennett, for kindly ate the list of ‘‘ new records,” 
s well as for critical assistance. Mr. Baker named some of the 
mee doubtful r which were not always determinable with 
certainty, being solleoist in an immature condition. Prof. Hackel 
' determined some of the grasses, and a few Rubi rest upon Dr. 
Focke’s authority ; the Revs. E. F. Linton, R. P. Murray, and 
Moyle Rogers, also gave ne help in naming a and sone! 
plants, as did Mr. W. H. Beeby: Dr. Buchanan White 
revised the more critical seiliows. _ Epilobia are mostly al in- 
pap 
* denotes a new record (so far as is known to us) “foe the vice- 
county mentioned ; + a form new to Britain 
Ranunculus Flammula L., var. cantar Lange. — Shore of 
an Feoir, near Inchnadamph; well marked. A form which 
seems ne connect this with the type occurs in another loch, 
descendin aa pees at 1200 feet.—*R. Stevent Andrz. (teste 
Beeby). Corrie Ardran, at 2500 feet; Coire Dubh Ghalair, Glen 
Lochay, at 9300 feet (88) ; it may prove to be far from _ 
bulbosus L. Sandy links, Tain 
*Nymphea alba L. Between Rosehall and Oykell Bridge (107). 
Arabis sagittata DC. was found on rocks in Glen Falloch, at 
feet. 
Cochlearia officinalis Li. A large form, which appears indis- 
tinguishable from cultivated littoralis of the Lizard, occurs in rills, 
above 1500 feet, on rn Faget: of Assynt. It is certainly not the 
ordinary Highland a — C. danica L. Muddy shores, Loch- 
inver (108) and Tain te “106 ). Not quite like the south coast plant 
in habit, but the fruit is typical. 
Helianthenvm Chamecistus Mill. Between Tarbat Ness .and 
———. Id. Ar ae in the sabe i Highlands, apparently. 
tension of its British range. nnett refers this, whioh is 
y our oe ae to we, bd compactum Lange 
k, B. compaction Bot. sskr. 14, p. 121) 
= P. dunense 
The author desaribes that (Danske Flora, p. 708) :—‘* Stems many, 
short and collected together tuft-wise [?] (tueformigt samlede), 
oa 
oe upper leaves often pubescent, flower-heads short and 7 a FS 
rge sepals white with a green mid-rib, a little narrower and 
saloon than the capsules.” In our plant the mature capsules = 
rather exceed the sepals, which are green, tinged wi with pinkish 
