410 
(which I very much doubt) will be sufficient to keep the 
Sium repens of Engl. FI. distinct from nodiflorum, if unaccom- 
panied by other marks. 
15. Conium maculatum.—Anglesea, July 8, 1828.— Styles 
at first very short, incurved, so as to cross each other; 
afterwards erect and longer; finally reflexed, and widely 
spreading. 
16. Crithmum maritimum.—Anglesea, August 24, 1826.— 
Umbel of eight or ten rays; partial umbels with six to twelve 
flowers, on very short stalks, contracted at the top. Brac- 
teas ovato-lanceolate, ribbed, at first horizontally spreading; 
afterwards deflexed; general bracteas mostly six together, 
of equal size; partial ones six or seven, also equal. Flowers 
yellowish, (not white,) as well as the anthers and the base 
ofthe styles. Petals broadly ovate, with an incurved point, 
and a ridge or keel along the middle, concave and inflexed, 
very deciduous, falling before the anthers burst. Calyx 
obsolete, Stamens longer than the petals, only one or two 
are erect, remaining after the petals are fallen, the other 
stamens seem to be abortive. Styles tumid at the base. 
Stigmas often indistinct. Seeds 5-ribbed; the inner one has 
a prominent central rib, while the outer one appears flat 
and ribbed at the back; ribs rounded and strong, the spaces 
between them a little striated. The united seeds almost 
globular. 
li. Smyrnium Olusatrum.—Wales, May, 1826.— Styles 
recurved, and almost recumbent on their tumid bases _ 
18. Hydrocotyle vwlgaris.—Anglesea, July 4, 1828— 
Umbel usually 5-flowered, flowers nearly sessile; sometimes 
a second umbel appears, arising from the centre of the first, 
elevated on a stalk. Styles widely spreading in the half-ripe 
fruit, with a tumid depressed base. 
19. Statice, 
Gey. Cuar. The limb of the calyx not plaited in S. spathu- 
~ lata. Stigma clavato-oblong in that and S. Limonium. 
` 20; Statice Limonium.—Near Aberffraw, Anglesea, August 
kaiii i aiaa 
