Cicuia.] UMBELLIFEEJE. U» 



Erne : Barrington 1884. On a small island near Maghery and on 

 the shores of Lough Feagh' in Armagh {Rev. G. Rohinson) : Flor,. 

 TTlst. In Closet Eiver, Armagh {Rev. H. W, Lett) ; along the 

 shore of Lough Neagh ; in the Newry canal ; in Mullaghmore 

 Lough and Lough GUly: Rraeger i8gj. Li ditches near the lake 

 at Farnham, Cavan : Flor. Hih. — XII. In the Lagan above Lis- 

 bum, and drains at Portmore, 1794 : Templeton MS. At Portmore : 

 £. JV, F, C. Proo, i8'j3. Abundant near Lough Neagh and Lough 

 Beg ; by the side of the Bann from Lough Beg to near Colefaiue, 

 occasionally {Moore) : Cyh. Legacurry, north-east of Hillsborough, 

 Down, in the mill-dam and down the river : Templeton MS,. 

 Drumkee bog, TuUycaime, Down ( Carry) : Flor, N.-F. 



First discovered by Dr. John Eutty in Cavan and Fermanagh,, 

 before 1772. 



CAEUM Linn. 

 1, C. vertieillatum Koch — Whorled Carcmay. 



Districts I. II. — — — _ — _ XL XII. 



Lat. 51i°-55i°. South- West and Forth. Type, Atlantic, 



Moist meadows and salt marshes ; locally abundant. Fl, July- 

 August. 



I. Found near the Laune Bridge, Killarney, August, 1804, and 

 between Kenmare and Priest's Leap mountain, 1805 : Mack. Rar, 

 A common plant in many parts of Kerry ; R. W. S. By the old 

 Kenmare road on Priest's Leap, Co. Cork ( Carroll) : Allin's Cork,. 

 Near Bantry Bay {W. Wilson), and — II. By a roadside west of 

 MiUstreet, Cork ( Carroll) : Flor. Cork. — XL By Lough Eske, at 

 the north-east comer : Sort i88j y. — XII. Bann side below Cole- 

 raine, 1797 : Templeton MS. Abundant by the Bann, both above 

 and below Coleraiae : Moore MS. Yery abundant at its Coleraine 

 station, and extends down the Bann to the coast sandhills : S. SfP^ 

 z8gj. Abundant on the headlands at the Giant's Causeway, 1887 

 {Praeger) : Flor. N.-F. By the Lagan near Belfast {Moore) : Cyh. 

 Ifot now found near Belfast : S.SfP. i8gj. Wet moor at Carn- 

 sampson, near BaUycastle {Praeger and Carr) : Ir. Nat. z8gy, 

 p. JOI, 



To 700 ft. in Kerry {Mart) ; but usually lowland. 



First found by Templeton in 1797, and first published by 

 Mackay in 1806. 



