

CHAPTER ir 





^ 



FIG. 20. The old central part of 

 Poole. Cross = old ballast place, 

 a-c = author's collecting places. 



Chilopoda 2 (2) species 



Diplopoda o » 



Oniscoidea 2 (2) » 



Mollusca 2 (i) » 



Specially considered groups i; 14 species, 8 "emigrants" = = 57 per cent. 



Coleoptera 

 Carabidae 

 Ciirculionidae 



Araneae 



I'j (6) species 



8 (3) » 

 o » 



3 (o) » 



b— Inside the power plant on the northern side of the Hamworthy Peninsula, 

 about 800 metres from the ballast-place (map, fig. 20). Artificial, open soil, of 

 the same kind as in the preceding locality but partly not so dry, in spots bare. 

 Vegetation: 



Achillea millefolium 



Anisantha (Bromiis) sterilis 



Artemisia vulgaris 



Ballota nigra 



Calystegia (Convolvulus) sepium 



Capsella hursa-pastoris (coll.) 



Cerastium vulgatum 



Cirsium arvense 



C. vulgare (lanceolatum) 



Coronopus didymus 



Epilobium hirsutum 



Equisetum arvense 

 Geranium dissectum 

 Holctis lanatus 

 Hordeum murinum 

 Hypochaeris radicata 

 Poa annua 

 P. trivialis 

 Plantago lanceolata 

 P. major 



Ranunculus repens 

 Rtimex crispus 



^ "Specially considered groups" here and in the following include: Carabidae, Cur- 

 culionidae, Dermaptera, Opilionida, "Iso-Myriapodn" and Mollusca. 



FIG. 21. The Port of Poole in the year of 1833, seaside view. 



Artist J. M. Gilbert. On stone by L. Haghe, Day & Haghe Lithographers. Pub- 

 lished by R. A. Grove, Lymington, Hants. — Inscription: "To the Merchants, 

 Shipowners & Inhabitants of Poole, This View of the Harbour, is most Respectfully 

 inscribed, by their obedient servant, Rich*^. And^Y. Grove." (Copy received by the 

 courtesy of Mr. E. F. J. Mathews, Poole.) 



The arrows indicate two ballast heaps. 



