Pinguicula.] LENTIBTJLAEIEJE. 275 



not rare in south. Kerry ; R. W. S. Found plentifully in marshy 

 ground in the west part of county Cork by Mr. Drummond : SInff. 

 Bot. 1810. "West side of the Lee ahove Inniscarro'W and ahout 

 Macromp and Bantry {Mr. Drummond^ : Mack. Gat. On Bottle 

 Hill : Flor. Cork. Abundant two miles above Iniscarra Bridge, 

 also at Castletown Berehaven, 1894; BallyaUey, south of Skib- 

 bereen ; Phillips. Bog by the new Kinsale road three miles from 

 Cork {J. Sullivan) : Annot. in Flor. Cork. JS'ear BaUinhassig 

 {K J. Shcm) ; and — II. Near Cloghroe {E. Mills) : Allin's Cork. 

 Bank of the Grlanmire river about half a mile above Carrignavar, 

 1 849 {J. D. Sumphreys) : Annot. in Flor. Cork. Gurtaveeha lake 

 near Millstreet, sparingly {More) : Ree. Add. 



l^ot found in Great Britain. In Ireland, confined to the 

 counties of Cork and Kerry, where it is abundant in many parts of 

 its restricted area and reaches its extreme northern limit for Europe. 

 Eanges on the Continent from Northern Spain to the Jura and the 

 Erench and Swiss Alps. Perhaps the most beautiful of the Hiber- 

 nian type plants. 



From sea-level {R. W. S.) to 2250 ft. in Kerry (Sm-t). 



First found, by James Drummond, near Macroom, in 1809. 



The most eastern native station known for this species is at 

 Carrignavar in about 8° 30' W. longitude. There is reason to fear, 

 however, that an attempt made to naturalize the plant much 

 farther to the eastward may iiltimately prove successful, and give 

 rise to a mistaken view as to the extension of its natural range. 

 About half a dozen roots having been introduced into a wild piece 

 of bog near the foot of Blackstairs mountain, Co, "Wexford, in 1879, 

 were found in 1896 to have increased to 27 plants which flowered 

 freely — see Jr. Nat. i8g6, p. 212. 



3. P. lusitanica Linn. — Pale Butter wort. 



Districts I. II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. VIII. IX. X. XI. XIL 

 Lat. 51i°-55J°. Throughout Ireland. Type, Atlantic-Scottish. 



Bogs, especially in mountain districts; frequent. Fl. June- 

 August. 



Sea-level in Down and in Kerry. To 1000 ft. in Donegal {Kani) \ 

 to 1600 ft. in Down (;8'. S;P.). 



Eather, common in many parts of the South, "West, and JS'orth ; 

 rarer in the East, and usually more frequent near the coast than 



inland. 



t2 



