282 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 



Brassica nigra Koch. 3. Hatch Beauchamp. 



Diplot&^is muralis DC. 9. Garden weed, Cheddar, Moss. 



Coronojms didymus Sm. 8. Kailway, Edington, Moss. 



Leiyidium heterophyllum Benth. var. canescens Gren. & Godr. 

 {L. Smitliii Hook.). 1. Frequent near Winsford. 



Hutchinsia j^&trcza Br. 9. I suspect tliat Hudson's Uphill 

 record was right ; it has prohably been exterminated by quarrying. 

 A careful search at Cheddar, early in the year, would probably 

 result in the confirmation of this, as has been the case with 

 several other species noted by J. C. Collins. 



Viola sylvestris Kit. forma '■'lencantha G. Beck. 5. Borders of 

 Somerton Wood ; very scarce. New for Somerset, I think. — V. 

 canina Fr. 8. Heathy pastures at the source of the Eiver Brue, 

 Moss. — ■■'■¥. lactea Sm. 2. I am now able to claim this definitely 

 as a Somerset plant ; it occurs close to the railway station at 

 Crowcombe Heathfield in fair quantity, and a few roots of *F. 

 lactea x Biviniana grow there with the parents. 



Poly gala serpyllacea Weihe. 1. Common near Winsford. — P. 

 calcarea F. Schultz. 9. Oolitic hillside between Combe Hay and 

 Bath, J. W. White sp. 10. Dr. Moss points out that the station 

 at Long Knoll, Maiden Bradley, is — as I had supposed^n Wilts, 

 as the county boundaries now stand. 



Silene maritima With. 8. Sandhills, Burnham, Moss. 



Lychnis Githago Scop, 8. Very rare near Bruton — only at 

 Collinghayes Farm, Moss. 



Stellaria aquatica Scop. 3. Wiveliscombe. 



Arenaria verna L. 9. Eocky pasture at the extreme north- 

 east of Cheddar Gorge, Moss. — A. tenuifolialu. 8. Great Western 

 Eailway, between Bruton and Castle Cary ; also abundant on a 

 roadside wall-top at Dunslade Farm, Bruton, Moss. 



■''Spergula saliva Boenn. 1. Cultivated ground near Winsford, 

 the first notice of this segregate in Somerset ; the other records 

 for aggregate S. arvensis L. have been referred to S. vulgaris 

 Boenn., which is certainly the predominant plant in the county. 



Montia fontana L. 1. Winsford. Under the var. major All. 

 [M. rivularis Gmel.) ; only seen in flower, so I cannot say if it 

 belongs to M. lamprosperma Cham. 



Hypericum Androsamum L. 9. Between Cheddar Wood and 

 the Gorge ; very local. 



Geranium versicolor L. 2. By a stream at Alcombe, Pugsley; 

 Murray records it as an escape at Porlock, &c. " 



Genista tinctoria L. 2. Very plentiful on a clayey common 

 and elsewhere, north-east of Stogumber. 4. Near Chard Eeservoir. 



Ulex minor Eoth (nanus Forst.). 2. Crowcombe Heath- 

 field. 



Trifolium hyhridum L. var. elegans (Savi). 3. Among rushes 

 on Holme Moor, near Wiveliscombe ; its presence in this un- 

 drained marsh, and in marshes near the Teign between Teign- 

 mouth and Newton Abbot, South Devon, where Major Wolley-Dod 

 and I found it in 1909, is difficult to account for, as it is usually a 

 relic of cultivation in arable land. 



