Fumaria.| FUMARIACE. 15 
First record in 1881: Barrington, Proc. R.I.A. 
This appears to be the most common of the Kerry 
Fumarie. 
Var. HIBERNICA Pugsley.—III. By the sea near Ballin- 
skelligs, 1889 !—V. Near Brandon village and near the sea, 
Castlegregory, 1902 !—VIT. Kilfenora, Tralee Bay, 1889 ! 
(R.W.S.) Praeger, Irish Nat. 1905, p. 161. 
EF. officinalis Linn. 
Districts — TI. TI. — V. VI. VII — IX. 
Colonist. Cultivated ground and waste places. Rare and 
uncertain in appearance. Ann. May—September. 
II. Ina field near Templenoe, Kenmare Bay, and a garden 
weed at Darrynane, 1889.—III. Sparingly in a field near 
Ballinskelligs coast-guard station, 1892.—V. In fields near 
Ventry coast-guard station and about Castlegregory, 1890- 
1907.—VI. A garden weed at Cloghereen, Muckross, 1892.— 
VII. On waste ground about the Spa, Tralee Bay, 1888 : 
R.W.S.—sparingly in all these stations—IX. About 
Tarbert, 1913: Phillips. 
First record in 1901: R.W.S., Topog. Bot. | 
Like many other weeds of cultivation I’. officinalis proves 
to be quite a rare plant in the county and uncertain in its 
appearances. The distribution of all these Fumitories, 
however, is still imperfectly known, and all are probably 
more frequent than the above records would show. 
CRUCIFERA. 
CHEIRANTHUS Linn. 
C. Cheiri Linn. Wallflower. 
Districts — — — — V. VI. VII. VI. — 
Alien. On ruins and old walls. Rare and local. Peren. 
May—June. Calcicole A. 
V. Abundant on the old castle at Minard west of 
Anascaul, Dingle Bay, 1914.—VI. In several places about 
the Muckross Abbey ruins, 1888-1912.—VII. Sparingly on 
walls about Tralee, 1899-1914.—VIII. In some plenty on 
Ardfert Abbey ruins, 1888-1907: R.W.S. 
First record in 1889: R.W.S., Journ. of Bot. 
This escape from cultivation is quite established about 
the old Abbeys of Ardfert and Muckross as well as at 
Minard. It appears to have reverted in all these stations 
to the wild state with small pure yellow flowers. 
