220 LENTIBULARIE. (Utricularia. 
First found, and recorded for Ireland in 1888: R.W.S., 
Journ. of Bot., p. 77. 
All the above records are founded on flowering plants. 
This Bladderwort will probably be found to be as widely 
distributed in the county as U. vulgaris. 
U. minor Linn. 
Districts I. II. WI. IV. V. VI. Vi. VIII. IX. 
Native. In bog holes, drains and in boggy roadside ditches. 
Rather common and locally abundant. Peren. July— 
September. Calcifuge A. 
From sea-level, to 1,450 feet in Lough Ferta, Teermoyle 
Mountain, Glenbeigh (Miss Delap)—not often seen so high. 
First record in 1806: Mackay Rar. 
This is by far the most common of the genus in Kerry. 
It flowers abundantly every season and often forms large 
tangled masses of delicate green threads floating on the 
surface of bog pools. 
U. Bremit Heer. 
District — — — [IV — ~~ ~— — — 
Native. Boggy ditch. Very rare and local?  Peren. 
June—August. 
IV. In a bog ditch in the Gap of Dunloe, 1875 (G. C. Druce) 
Irish Nat. 1910, p. 237 ( fide Prof. Glick). 
First record in 1910: Druce, loc. cit. 
This Utricularia has been recorded from Scotland on 
several occasions but as the specimens found were without 
flowers the identification could not be made with certainty. 
Prof. Glick, however, when examining Mr. Druce’s aquatic 
plants detected among his Bladderworts flowering specimens 
of U. Bremii gathered in Kerry and U. ochroleuca from 
Galway, the first time these plants have been recognised as 
flowering in the British Isles. Their distribution in Ireland 
is at present quite unknown, but, no doubt, both plants 
will be found in other localities now that a description of 
their flowers is more readily available. 
U. intermedia Hayne. 
Districts I. WI. TI. IV. V. VI. — VU — 
Native. Bog holes, lakes and ponds, sometimes floating, 
more often creeping along their muddy margins, also in 
boggy streams and ditches. Rather rare but locally abun- 
dant over the greater portion of the county, very rare in 
the north. Peren. August. Calcifuge A. 
