Littorella.]~ PLANTAGINEA. 239°. 
London labelled “‘Castlemain Bay, Kerry. Aug. 1841, 
W. Andrews.” Mr. Arthur Bennett has pointed out, how- 
ever, that the plants distributed are not H. glabra Linn. but 
H. ciliata Bab. No form of Herniaria is known to occur in 
Ireland as a native, and Mr. Andrew’s record can only be 
considered as unsatisfactory as his reputed discovery of 
Saxifraga Guthriana—a garden hybrid—which he stated he 
found in a remote mountain gully in Glencar.] 
CHENOPODIACE2Z. 
CHENOPODIUM Linn. 
C. album Linn. White Goosefoot. 
Districts I. If. III. f£V. V. VI. VII. VIII. IX. 
Colonist. Cultivated ground, roadsides and waste places. 
Common. Ann. July—September. 
From sea-level, to 1,050 feet amongst crops near the 
Roughty-Ballyvourney road (£.W.S.). 
First record in 1881: Barrington, Proc. R.I.A. 
Both forms, C. candicans (Lamk.) and C. viride (Linn.), 
are of common occurrence. 
Cc. rubrum Linn. Red Goosefoot. 
Districts — — — — V. — VII. VIII. IX. 
Colonist or denizen. Moist waste places near the sea. Very 
rare and uncertain in appearance. Ann. July—September. 
VII. In some plenty in a damp hollow near Fenit, Tralee 
Bay, 1914.—VIII. Sparingly near the sea at Rahoneen west 
of Ardfert and near the tidal Akeragh Lough south of Bally- 
heige: R.W.S. 1888.—IX. Sparingly near Ballybunnion, 
1894: R.W.S. 
First record in 1888: R.W.S., Journ. of Bot. 
Var. PSEUDO-BOTRYOIDES Watson.—V. In a damp stony 
hollow near the east end of Derrymore Island, Tralee Bay, 
in some plenty: R.W.S. 1888. 
Unlike the type which is rarely seen far from habitations 
this variety grew in a locality quite remote from any obvious 
source of introduction. 
C. Bonus-Henricus Linn. Good King Henry. Allgood. 
Districts — TI. [11] — — VI — ~—~ ~— 
Alien. Roadsides and waste places about towns. Very rare 
and local. Peren. June—August. 
