232 
TIIE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
B.GcuO- 
By a stream in the upper part 
By a waterfall on a stream 
Leptoscyphus Taylori Hook. Mitt. Not uncommon.-' 
malus (Hook.) Mitt. Wet peaty ground, apparently rare.— *L. cunei- 
folius (Hook.) Mitt. In some abundance, mostly on Frullania 
growing on rock, in the wood by Loch Assynt. 
# Lophocolea cuspidate Limpr. Wood by Loch Assynt, c.per. 
*Ckilos cyphus polyanthus (L.). Corda var. fray ills (Both) 
K. M. Marshy ground, Glen Dubli. 
< * Harp) a nth us Flotoiuianus Nees. 
of Glen Dubh. 
Saccogyna viticulosa (Sm.) Hum. 
from Glas Ben. 
Ceplialozia bicuspidata (L.) Hum. Common, c.per.— *0. Bam- 
mersiana (Hub.) Spruce. Wet peaty ground, c.per.— G. pleniceps 
(Aust.) Lindb. var. macrantha (Kaal. & Nichols.) lv. Mull. 
Marshy ground, rare, c.per.— * O. Loitlesbergeri Schiffn. Among 
Sphagnum, rare.—* (7. media Lindb. Wood by Loch Assynt.— *G. 
leucantha Spruce. Near Inchnadamph. 
*Nowellia curvifolia (Hicks.) Mitt. On moist peat. 
* Prionolobus striatulus (Jens.) Schiffn. Bare, Meallan Liatli 
Beag, c.per. 
Bygrobiella laxifolia (Hook.) Spruce. In and by the stream in 
the upper part of Glen Hubh, sometimes c.per. 
Odontoschisma sphagni (Hicks.) Hum. Here and there on 
moist moors near Inchnadamph.— *0. denudatum (Nees) Hum. 
var. elongation Lindb. Wet ground, Meallan Liatli Mor, sparingly. 
*Bazzania trierenata (Wahl.) Pears. Generally common in the 
district.— B. triangularis Pears. Ben Fliurain, sparingly.— *B. 
Pearson i (Stepli.) Pears. Skree on Meallan Liatli Mor in company 
with Scapania niuibosa, Anastrophyllum Donianum , Jamesoniella 
Garringtoni and other Atlantic species. A fine form and rather 
more robust than the plant from Ireland ; also among Anastro- 
phyllum on Ben Fliurain. I have also seen this species from Ben 
Atta, Glencoe, where it was gathered by the late Mr. W. W r est, and 
it is possible that it extends over a considerable area of the West of 
Scotland. I have seen it commonly this year in Glen Nevis. 
Lepidozia trichoclados K. Mull. Moist peaty ground in the wood 
by Loch Assynt with a few immature perianths. Among the older 
stems are a number of oblong bodies of variable size, which are really 
short, swollen branches, often provided with very rudimentary leaves. 
They appear to function as gemmae, which are rare in this genus and 
very rare of this form among all Hepatics. 
Blepharostoma trichophyllum (L.) Hum. Common and not 
infrequently c.per. in the wood by Loch Assynt. 
Anthelia julacea (L.) Hum. Common on wet stony ground. 
* Berber ta adunca (Hicks.) Gray. Ben Fhurain at about 
2000 feet, well marked.— *B. Hutchinsice (Gottsche) Evans. More 
generally distributed in the district, but at lower elevations than 
B. adunca. These two species are carefully distinguished, and valid 
reasons are given for considering them distinct by Hr. A. W. Evans, 
of Yale University, in his “Notes on the Genus Herbert a" (Bull. 
Torrey Hot. Club, 1017, pp. 10 L et seqq .). An abstract of this paper, so 
