MOSS-FLORA OF THE DOWARD HILLS. 835 
Funaria ce Dicks. Cultivated ground. In tillage — 
reh. hl. Thi sed 
near White — F. calcarea Wa in earth on exp 
limestone, c cated to a single station. Rocks at the 8.E. ace of 
the Little Sat, 1877, and again in 1890.— I’. hygrometrica L. 
Common. undant on disused charcoal floors in ds. 
the woo 
[Bartramia pomiformis L, will probably be Saad on a: conglome- 
rate of the northern exposure. 
Philonotis does L. On the river- ray rare, and in small 
barren bits. eee Doward; Little Dow 
m pyrif . Sha dy ke porte In Arthur’s Cave, 
1873 and 1874, trating. Shady wall near the Lower Ferry, 1890, 
barren. Both these stations are on limestone. B. nutans Schreb. 
On conglomerate sand in the sandstone tract in the Lord’s ses 
along with Campylopus torfaceus B. & 8. Not seen elsewhere.— B. 
carneum Li. Moist vertical loam of the river-bank, ian detilien 
Moist bank at the Mine Caves.— B. albicans Wahl. With the last 
on the river-bank; abundant, but always barren. A large form on 
the shady river- bank above the Fish-house.— [B. pendulum hides 
should be looked for on the river-bank.] —- B. inclinatum Swartz. 
Wall-tops; rare? Wall-top at the Lower Ferry, 1890. Specimens 
from one or two other localites on the Doward, pes by Miss 
K. Armitage! —- B. Barnesit Wood. Muddy sto: mn the river- 
ank; veryrare. Near the Upper Ferry.—[B. incermeion W.& M. 
was reported by Mr. Watkins from a wall at Wyast 2 Leys, but 
proved to be a state of B. capillare L.] — B. bimum Schreb t the 
bog, along with B. pseudotriquetrum. Steep river-bank a the 
Fish-house. Barren at both stations.—B. torquescens B. & S. . 
horizontal ledges in disused lime-quarries, at several oma a 
not abun »-— B. atropurpureum On 
Little Doward. — B. versicolor Braun. Ata —— station on oo 
shady river-bank above the Fish-house; fruitin 1887, barren, 
1888.—B. cespiticium L. Wall-tops, abundant. a Vad. er 
In dry turf on ~ sabe Doward, barren, 1873. — B. argen —— . 
Common. Abun on the charcoal floors in the wo — B. 
es L. Wall aps: rocks of sand and limestone ; sear &c. ; 
very common. — B. Donianum Grey. Rare. In large barren tufts 
by the river-side, within the influence os thé winter floods. Great 
Doward, above the Fish-house.— B, provinciale Phil. Shady lime- 
stone ledges, confined to a very s ott area in the Lardia? Wood. 
Fruiting in small quantity in several seasons. — B. pallens Swartz. 
i P 
and barren. — B. pseudotriquetrum Hedw. Abundant at the bog, 
and fruiting freely. — B. rosewm Schreb. Shady woods, very rare. 
At one station beneath the cliffs on the east side of Lord’s Wood. 
is 
Herefordsh. p. 412, from the river-bank, will probably prove to be 
M. pion Hedw.] -——-M. undulatum Hedw. Abundant wherever 
