Boraffmeee.] APPENDIX. 501 



&c., thioughout Ireland, but always sparingly and only as an 

 escape from, or relic of, cultivation. 



Anchusa ofB,cinalis Linn. 

 IV. In sandy wastes at Eosslare Point, "Wexford : ffart z88j 13. 

 An alien, probably introduced with ballast. 



Myosotis sylvatica HofEm. 



II. A single plant in a shrubbery at Castle 'Widenham, Castletown- 

 roche, Cork, 1897; Phillips.— XII. Cave Hill, &c. (Tempieion) ; 

 ■Wolfhill {Thompson) : Flor. Hist. 



Further information is desii-able before admitting this to the 

 Irish Plora ; the records for Dist. XII. are no do4ibt referable to 

 the form umbrosa Bab. of M. arvensis. 



CONVOZrULACE^. 



Cuscuta Epilinum "Weihe — Flax Dodder. 

 Occurs sporadically in flax in many parts of Ireland, but is growing 

 rare with the decline in the cultivation of that crop. 



SOLAJSTACEjE. 



Lycium barbarum Linn. — Tea plant. 



IV. Established at Eosslare Point, Wexford: Haft i88j p. — 



V. Thoroughly established in sandy groimd, and by the roadside 

 between Greenfield and Sutton, Co. Dublin: Mor. Sowth. — 

 XI. Established by the Bundrowes river near Bundoran: Ha/rt 

 i88sy. 



A North African and Mediterranean species often cultivated in 

 cottage gardens and tending to become naturalized on sandy shores 

 in Ireland as it has ah-eady done in England. 



Atropa Belladonna Linn. — Deadly Nightshade. 



III. Abundantly by the brook-side where an old monastery stood 

 at StradbaUy, Queen's Co. : Wade Rar. and {T. Chandlee) : Cyl. 

 Among ruins at Kells, Xilkenny (P. Duffy) : Gyh. — XI. Abundantly 

 in an exposed rocky place above tide-mark on the south side of 

 Gweebarra Bay, east of Iniskeel, Donegal, remote from any ruin or 

 dwelling : Ha/rt i886. 



Also recorded from Districts I. V. VI. and XII., bat the fore- 

 going stations are the only ones in which this relic of cultivation 

 has been found in wild-looking localities. 



