200 BORAGINE. [AL yosotis. 
M. repens Don. = Forget-me-not. 
Districts I. TI. TI. IV. V. VI. VIE. VII. IX. 
Native. Wet ditches, boggy places and by streams, &c. 
Common, especially in the south. Peren. June—September. 
From sea-level, to 1,325 feet by the Priestsleap road, to 
1,350 feet on Mullaghveal Pass west of Connor Hill and to 
1,450 feet by Lough Ferta, Teermoyle Mountain, Glenbeigh 
R.W.S.). 
First record in 1882: Hart, Proc, R.I.A. 
M. arvensis Lamk. M. intermedia Link. 
Districts I. II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. VIII. IX. 
Native. On banks, in woods and cultivated land, &c. 
Common. Ann. May—September. 
From sea-level, to 1,175 feet on Connor Hill road (R.W.S.). 
First record in 1881: Barrington, Proc. R.I.A. 
M. versicolor Reichb. 
Districts I. II. II. IV. V. VI. VII. VIII. IX. 
Native. Dry banks, cultivated ground, waste places, &c. 
Rather common. Ann. April—July. 
From sea-level, to 1,350 feet on Connor Hill road (R.W.S.). 
First record in 1857: Rev. W. M. Hind, Phytol., p. 25. 
Decidedly less common in Kerry than M. arvensis, and 
quite local in the south. 
LITHOSPERMUM Linn. 
L. officinale Linn. Gromwell. 
Districts — VI. 
- —- — — Vil — 
Native. Rocky lake-shore and roadsides. Very rare and 
local. Peren. June—July. Calcicole A. 
VI. Plentiful over a very limited area by the shore of the 
Lower Lake, Killarney, on the north side of Ross bay : 
R.W.S. 1902, and in 1904.—VIII. In some plenty on both 
sides of the road a little west of Lixnaw bridge, 1907: 
R.W.S. 1908. 
First record 1902: R.W.S., Irish Nat. 
This appears to be one of the rarest native lowland plants 
in Kerry. In its Killarney station it covers an area less than 
twenty yards square, while at Lixnaw it extends along only 
a few yards of the roadside 
