APPENDIX II. 
591 
10a — f, sep. tinited to about half way greenish white with white 
margin, stam. 5,/r. (2 — 2i mm.) shining compressed trigonous 
one side narrower, sides convex smooth or rarely piinctulate. — 
C4rassy roadsides on Arthur's Seat, Edinb. A. VII. -IX. 8. 
Page 369. 
Euphorbia L. ; the following are critical and require further 
study ; these diagnoses and names are tentative. 
9c(. E. Cyparissias L. ; dwarf, rays of umbel numerous, 
ster. branches below umbel numerous beaiing capillaiy 1., 
inner pai'tial bracts often reddish, inv. -lobes narrow, horns v. 
short and small. — Cultivated fields, scarcely naturalised. 
P. V.-VIT. E.S. 
96. E. estdoides Ten. ; E. Cyparissias var. majo7- Boiss. ; 
double as large in all its parts, stem. 15 — 30 cm. barren shoots 
below the umbels fewer or none with narrow but not setaceous 
1., rays of umbel less numerous, partial bracts never reddish, 
involucre lobes as in 9a. — May be E. Loreyi Jord. — {E.pini folia 
Lam.? ; Lorey)but is not E. pseudo-cyparissias Joid. — ? native 
in south-east in stony hilly places. P. V.-VII. E. 
9c. E. Esida L. ; E.B. 1399 ; creeping, usually without 
barren shoots below the umbel, /. spreading narrowly elliptic, 
broadest at or above middle, attenuate at both ends siihobtuse 
sometimes mucronate, often denticulate near tip, inv. -lobes 
suborbicular, horns short narrow. — Woods P. VI.-VII. E.S. 1 
9'L E. virgata W. & K. ; root simple descending many 
headed, stem 30-60 cm., 1. typically rigid strict entire lin. lane, 
scarcely narrowed at base, gradually narroived to attenuate 
acute apej; partial bracts with truncate subcimeate base, inv. 
lobes rather narrow, horns broad stout often bi'oadened above 
typically longer than breadth of lobe. — Waste places, river 
banks. P. V.-VII. E. 
forma esvlijolia Thell. ; 1. long narrowed towards base often 
broadest above middle otjtusish. — Critical. E. Esula auct. in 
part. In several ways intermediate between 9c and 9c?. 
Page 374. 
Ulmus L. ; the normal 1. are described : summer 1. and those 
of suckers, adventitious and coppiced shoots are always rough 
above and often much larger although smaller and narrower 
in U. campestris. Small leaved forms of most species some- 
times occur. All the species except U. glabra are sometinies 
suberous, x U. hollandica commonly so. 
1. U. glabra Huds. em. Mill. ; TI. nitens Moench ; tree 
30 — 35 m. high, branches large lower wide-spreading terminal 
