APPENDIX B 563 



P- 410 ONAGRARIE^ 



Fuchsia Riccartoni 

 Found on old mining tailings near Ross, South Westland. 



LABIATiE 

 p. 460 Thymus serpyllum, Linn. 



Abundantly naturalised near Clyde, in Central Otago. 



p. 486 CYPERACE^ 



Kyllingia brevifolia, Rottb. 

 This species, doubtfully placed as indigenous in the Manual N.Z. 

 Flora (p. 764), is now considered by Cheeseman as an introduction. 



Cyperus tenellus, Linn. 

 Cyperus vegetus, Willd. 

 Both species are treated as doubtfully indigenous in the Manual 

 (pp. 765 and 766), but are now considered to be introductions. 



p. 496 



In regard to Festuca ovina and F. rubra Mr Cheeseman has sent me 

 the following note (July, 1921): 



"For the common fescue-tussock I follow J. B. Armstrong in calling 

 it Festuca novee-zealandiee. The introduced fescues are very different. They 

 are common only in a comparatively few places where they have been sown 

 purposely. The most widely spread is known as ' Chewing's fescue.' Red 

 fescue {F. rubra) is taller and more tussocky, but is easily distinguished 

 from F. novee-zealandice. There are also several other indigenous, but non- 

 tussocky species oi Festuca, not properly classified as yet. Petrie has named 

 a distinct one F. multtnodis." 



p. 501 LYCOPODIACEiE 



Selaginella Kraussiana 

 Common in damaged forest in the vicinity of Wellington. 



APPENDIX C 



THE TUTIRA DISTRICT 



Since this work was in print, a very fine book entitled Tutira, the Story 

 of a New Zealand Sheep Station, by Mr H. Guthrie-Smith, has been published 

 by Messrs William Blackwood and Sons. It is a most interesting record 

 of fine observational work, by a skilled naturaUst, dealing vrith the physical 

 and biological features and history of a comparatively small area of land 



36—2 



