122 UMBELLIFERA. [Apium. 
VIII. In marshes by the River Brick near Sleveen, 1904, 
about five miles from the nearest sea ; the land about here, 
however, is very low-lying and before the embanking of 
the Brick and Cashen Rivers was, no doubt, subject to tidal 
influence as the presence here of @nanthe Lachenalit and 
Scirpus maritimus indicates. 
First record in 1884: Hart, Proc. R.I.A. 
A. nodiflorum Reichb. fil. Helosciadiwm nodiflorum Koch 
Districts I. IJ. I. IV. V. VI. VII. VII. IX. 
Native. In ditches, streams and watery places. Very 
common. Peren. June—September. 
First record in 1884: Hart, Proc. R.I.A. 
A. inundatum Reichb. fil. Helosciadium inundatuwm Koch. 
Districts I. IT. IIT. IV. V. Vi. VII. VI. IX. 
Native. In shallow water in lakes and ponds and on their 
muddy margins, in bog-holes, ditches and sluggish streams. 
Common. Peren. June—July. 
From sea-level, to 1,450 feet in Lough Ferta, Teermoyle 
Mountain, Glenbeigh (R.W.S.). 
First record in 1857: Rev. W. M. Hind, Phytol., p. 28. 
Few plants vary more in appearance than this species. 
When growing in deep water, it is a slender straggling, 
usually barren, plant, several feet in length, with all its 
leaves capillary, while on the muddy margins of ponds, &c., 
it forms a compact little growth, one or two inches in 
length, flowering and fruiting profusely. 
CARUM Linn. 
C. verticillatum Koch. 
Districts I. OU. II. IV. V. VI. VII. VII. — 
Native. Moist meadows and poor boggy pastures. Common 
and locally abundant in the south, becoming rarer towards 
the centre, and absent or very rare in the extreme north. 
Peren. July—August. Calcifuge B. 
The most northerly stations at present known in the 
county are—V. Sparingly near the summit of the Aughils- 
Camp road on its north side, 1894.—VII. Sparingly by the 
roadside near Foley’s Glen (Finglas stream) about two miles 
south of Tralee, 1890.—VIII. Rather sparingly in wet fields 
east of Abbeydorney, 1904-08: R.W.S. 
From sea-level, to 700 feet on the Reeks (Hart), to 750 
feet by the old Kenmare road south of Galway’s bridge, to 
800 feet by the Aughils-Camp road, and to 1,450 feet near 
