22 CRUCIFERA. [Cardamine. 
1911, was unsuccessful, and it is better, perhaps, to 
await specimens before admitting C. amara to the Kerry 
flora.] 
DRABA Linn. 
D. incana Linn. 
District — — — IV. — -—- —- ~~ — 
Native. Mountain cliffs. Very rare and local. Peren. 
June—July. 
IV. On the cliffs near the summit of Magillicuddy’s 
Reeks, 1805 : Mackay Rar. Not scarce over a limited space 
on the cliffs north of Lough Googh and in two distinct 
gullies on cliffs looking south between Cummeenmore and 
the Black Valley : seen only on the south side of the Reeks : 
Hart 1882. 
From 2,380 to 2,470 feet above the Black Valley and at 
2,550 feet above Lough Googh (Hart). 
First record in 1806: Mackay Rar. 
The three localities mentioned above are all within a 
mile of each other on the southern slopes of the Reeks, and 
mark the southern limit to the range of Draba incana in 
the British Isles. They lie a full degree south of any station 
known for this plant in England and a degree and a half 
south of the nearest Irish locality in Co. Galway, where it 
occurs as a lowland plant along the south shore of Lough 
Mask. 
[D. muratis Linn.—‘‘ On the sides of the mountains 
round the upper or southern part of Lough-Lane” (Dr. 
Smith) Hist. of Kerry, 1756, p. 374, No. 16. It is impossible 
to determine now what plant was really intended by Dr. 
Smith, but there can be no doubt that some error of identi- 
fication has taken place.] 
EROPHILA DC. 
E. vulgaris DC. JZ. verna E. Meyer. Draba verna Linn. 
Whitlow Grass. 
Districts — — TIT. — V. VI. VII. VIII. IX. 
Native. Sandy and gravelly places, walls and rocks. 
Rather common near the sea, rare inland. Ann. January— 
June. Calcicole B. 
If. On the Ballinskelligs sandhills, 1914: Miss Delap. 
On sandhills near the Inny River, Waterville, 1896, and on 
