Reseda. | RESEDACE, 33 
R 
RESEDACEZ. 
RESEDA Linn. 
. Luteola Linn. Weld. Yellow Weed. 
Districts I. If. WI. IV. V. VI. VII. VIII. IX. 
Native or Denizen. Dry banks, roadsides and waste places. 
Rather common. Bien. June—September. Calcicole B. 
First record in 1901: R.W.S., Topog. Bot. 
The exact standing of this plant in the county is impossible 
to determine. Most of its stations are in the vicinity of 
villages or habitations, and it appears to have been formerly 
grown for dyeing purposes. 
VIOLACES. 
VIOLA Linn. 
Y. palustris Linn. Marsh Violet. 
Y. 
Districts I. II. QI. IV. V. Vi. VII. VII. IX. 
Native. Mountain swamps, stream-sides and other wet 
places. Common. April—June. Calcifuge A. 
From sea-level, to 2,550 feet on the Reeks (Hart), to 
2,790 feet on the summit of Baurtregaum and to 3,120 feet 
on Brandon summit (2£.W.S.). 
First record in 1806: Mackay Rar. 
Var. epipsiia (Ledebour)—IV. In the Black Valley, 1911 : 
Mrs. Jenner—VI. Near the Upper Lake, Killarney, 1911: 
(Druce) New Phytologist, Nov. 1911. 
Whether V. epipsila is specifically distinct from V. 
palusiris is very doubtful. Until a few years ago it appears 
to have been passed over in the British Isles as a large form 
of the latter plant; since, however, attention has been 
drawn to their points of difference, V. epipsila has been 
recognised in several localities in England, and in 1911 was 
found for the first time in Ireland in two localities in Kerry. 
The distribution of this plant as given by Nyman, includes 
the greater portion of northern Europe, so its occurrence in 
the British Isles is not unexpected ; its exact range there is 
still quite uncertain. 
- odorata Linn. Sweet Violet. 
Districts I. — IT. IV. V. VI. VII. VII. IX. 
Alien. In woods and shady places, and by roadsides. Rare. 
Peren. February—-April. 
I. Sparingly as an escape in Ardtully woods, Kilgarvan, 
1904: R.W.S.—III. An escape or, planted in Glanleam 
‘ Oo 
