719 
XVI r. 
FAUNA AND FLORA OF NORFOLK. 
Part VI. Flowering Plants and Ferns. 
Additions and Corrections.* 
Ry Herbert 1). (Ieldart. 
Read i^th March, 1884 . 
It having been determineil to print additional lists of the lauiia 
and Flora of our County, to bring those already published up to the 
present date at the close of the third volume of the Society’s 
‘ Transactions,’ the following list is presented as containing all the 
additions known to the compiler. Among them will be found 
two species new to Groat Britain,— iVaias marina, discovered by 
Iilr. Arthur Bennett, F.L.S., in Hickling Broad; and Carex (rinervix, 
collected some years since in the neighbourhood of Yarmouth, 
probably at Caistor, by Mr. Hampden G. Glasspoole, and recently 
identified by ^Ir. Bennett. 
Omitting the genera Ruins, Rosa, and Sohx, in which no two 
authorities seem able to agree as to what forms should be considered 
entitled to rank as species, the following indigenous species have 
been added to the list : — Ranunculus Lenoinnandi, StcUaria nemorum, 
Geranium rotundifolium, Lythnim hyssopifolia, (Enanthefluoiatilis, 
Erijeron canadense, Veronica spicafa, Siaticehinercosa, Polygonum 
mite, Rumex pratensis, Gagea lufea, Uarex ericetorum, Eguisefum 
rariegatum, Chara tomentosa, polyacantha, and aspera. Besides 
these, Hypericum hircinum, Potentilla norcegica, Crepis sefosa, 
Linaria juaviHreti, Sfachys annua. Euphorbia esula, Bromus 
maximus, madritensis, and iectorum, though they have certainly 
* The lists to which the present list is supplemental are, “ Flowering 
Plants and Ferns,” Section I. and II. (Trans, of the Norfolk and Norwich 
Nat. Soc. vol. ii. pp. 74—110, and pp. 229—242), and “Norfolk Naiadaceai 
and Characeaj ” (vol. iii. pp. 379—383). 
