87 CAKDAMINE IMPATIBNS. 



41 



87 Cardamine impatiens. 



2 Corn, east ? " Crouch." 



3 Devon south . ' ' Eoberts " sp . 



4 Devon north ? 



6 Som. north. Thwaites oat. 

 13 Sussex west. Beeby, 



16 Kent west. Beeby. 



17 Surrey ! Salmon sp. 



34 Gloster west. Watkins sp. 



35 Monmouth. 



36 Hereford. Purchas cat. 



37 Worcester. E. Lees sp. 



38 Warwick. Bloxam sp. 



39 Stafford. (Dr. Eraser.) 



40 Salop. 



41 Glamorgan. 



47 Montgy. J. E. Bowman ms. 



48 Merioneth. Britten. 



50 Denbigh. J.E.Bowman sp. 



51 Flint. E. Brown. 

 57 Derby ! Painter. 



60 Lane. west. Melvill. 



64 York m. west. Tatham sp. 



65 , n. west. 

 69 Westmoreland. 

 75 Ayr? 



N.B. The C. sylvatica has 

 been frequently misreported 

 as if C. impatiens, thus 

 throwing much doubt on 

 several of the counties ; 

 among which those enume- 

 rated below are mostly 

 errors thus occasioned : — 

 [7 21 55 58 59 61 62 

 70 77 83 97 111 ; also 2 

 and 4 ?] 



88 Arabis thaliana. 



Counties all, except 1 35 42 

 45 46 48 53 72 73 74 

 97 98 101 102 103 105 

 107 108 110 112. There 

 can be little doubt that it 



could be found in all of 

 these counties, if sought 

 early in the season, before 

 it becomes hidden by more 

 robust plants. And bota- 

 nists accustomed to name it 

 Sisymbrium thalianum may 

 omit to mark it under Arabis 

 in a printed catalogue. 



89 Arabis petraea. 



48 Merioneth ? ' ' Lhwy d. ' ' 



49 Carnarvon. Bab. sp. 



70 Cumberland ? "Wood." 

 88 Perth mid. Light, scot. 



91 Kincardine, "bed of Dee." 



92 Aber. south ! Dickie sp. 

 96 Easterness. "Cairngorm." 

 98 Argyle. F. M. Webb rec. 

 08 Mull. "Maughan." 



04 Skye. Lawson cat.. 

 08 Suth. west. Graham sp. 

 10 Hebrides. " Harris." 

 12 Shetland. Tate sp. 



South Wales. Bab. man. 



[3 40 57 62 65]. 



90 Arabis stricta, 



() Som. north. Thwaites oat. 

 34 Gloster west. Thwaites sp. 

 [70 Cumberland] . 



91 Arabis ciliata. 

 var. 



45 Pembroke. Bab. man. 



N.B. The remarks on this 

 plant in the third edition of 

 ' English Botany ' would 

 suggest that it may occur 

 in other counties, but over- 

 looked as a form of Arabis 

 hirsuta. G. Don reported 

 an "Arabis ciliata" from 



G 



