292 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 



L. arvense L. IV. 2. Arable field adjoining Barkham's Copse, 

 Oarisbrooke. 



Lycopsis arvensis L. IV. 1. Headon. 



Pinguicula lusitanica L. IV. 1. The habitat given in 

 Townsend's Flora under "V. (S. Wight) (1) Colwell Heath," 

 should be IV. 1 ; but the only part of the heath where I saw it 

 growing in 1867 and 1869 has long since been enclosed as the 

 garden of a house. V. 2. Bohemia (1908, 1910, E. W. Pollard). 



Utricularia vulgaris L. IV. 1. In flower in " ditches in the 

 marsh near Easton," August 12th, 1867 and since, and August 

 22nd, 1906. 



Lysimachia nemorum L. IV. 3. Staplers. IV. 4. Osborne. 



Anagallis tenella Murray. IV. 3. Sullens, near Newport. 



Ccntunculus miniums L. IV. 3. St. George's Down. 



Stat ice Limonium L. forma pyramidalis Salmon. IV. 3. Near 

 East Medina Mill. 



S. humilis Salmon. " IV. 4. Wootton Creek, 1860," H. Tri- 

 men, Herb. Mus. Brit. ; King's Quay. IV. 3. Near East Medina 

 Mill. 



S. humilis x Limonium (x S. Neumanni Eouy). IV. 1. By 

 the Yar, Freshwater. IV. 3. Near East Medina Mill. 



Polygonum Bistorta L. V. 2. " Mottisfont " is near Bomsey, 

 Hants ; there is no place of that name in the island. 



Hippophae rhamnoides L. Has been largely planted at Tot- 

 land Bay. The only place in the island in which it has the 

 appearance of growing wild is St. Helen's Spit, but that locality 

 rests under suspicion, since both Bromfield and A. G. More were 

 guilty of the most reprehensible practice of planting and sowing 

 seeds of various non-indigenous plants there. See A. G. More's 

 Supplement to the Flora Vectensis, Journ. Bot. 1871, 11, 19. 



Euphorbia Peplis L. V. 2. St. Helen's Spit (Dr. B. Daydon 

 Jackson, 1872). Not recorded since, I believe. Was this another 

 plant of Bromfield's planting ? 



E. Paralias L. " Saltmead, a bay W. of Burnet Wood (1879)." 

 Neither "Saltmead" nor "Burnet Wood" are known as places in 

 the island. A single, very small, plant was found in Gurnard Bay 

 in 1868, and there is no subsequent record. As I saw it growing 

 in great profusion on the shore of Hayling Island in 1870, forming 

 seed abundantly, and as it was observed there in 1849 by Dr. 

 Bromfield, it would not seem unlikely that seeds might have 

 drifted across to the shores of the island, but the sowing by Dr. 

 Bromfield of seeds both at St. Helen's and Norton Spit (in both 

 of which localities it has flourished for many years) leaves the 

 matter doubtful. 



E. platyphyllos L. IV. 3. Alverstone Whippingham. V. 2. 

 Steephill. "Newbridge; Tate (Baker)" is in District IV. 2, 

 not V. 2. 



Mercurialis annua L. IV. 3. Newport. 



Ceratophyllum dcmersum L. IV. 3. Pond, Heytesbury Farm, 

 near Newport. 



Typha angustifolia L. This species increases and seems to 



