SOMERSET PLANTS 285 



consider quite distinct from G. Aviarella, with which it is usually 

 associated. 



Myosotis ccspitosa Schultz. 4. Near Chard. 



Cuscuta EjjWujvmm Murr. 8. Godminster, and the Ridge, 

 near Bruton, Moss. 



Verbasciini Blattaria L. 2. Several plants in a field at Mine- 

 head, Pugsley. 



Linaria minor Desf. 8. Creech Hill, Bruton ; also on the 

 Great Western Railway in districts 8, 9, and 10, Moss. 



Veronica montana L. 3. Woods between Wrantage and Hatch 

 Beauchamp. 



■•'Euphrasia stricta Host. " Luxuriant and typical on a hillside 

 at Bossington, 1910," Pugsley. New for Somerset. 



Pedicularis palustris L. 3. Wet moors near WiveliscomlDC. 



Melampyrum pratense L. 2. Stogumber ; typical. 



Orobanche minor Sm. 3. Cloverfield, West Monkton, 1910 ; 

 introduced. 



*• Mentha pubescens Willd. (M. aquatica x longifolia). 2. 

 Stream at Alcombe, 1910, Pugsley. New for Somerset. — M. 

 spicata L. (viridis h.). 9. Cheddar; alien. Moss. — M. piperita 

 L. 2. Alcombe, Pugsley. — M. aquatica x arvensis {sativa L.). 

 3. Near WiveliscomlDe. 



Lycopus europcBUS L. 4. Chard Reservoir. 



Melissa officinalis L. 2. Abundant by a roadside near Sel- 

 worthy ; copse at Bossington, Pugsley. 3. Roadside between 

 Milverton and Bathealton ; West Hatch. 



Salvia Vcrbenaca L. (auct. angl.). 2. Dunster Churchyard, 

 Pugsley. 



Scutellaria minor Huds. 8. Source of the Brue, Kingswood 

 Warren, Moss. 



Marrubium vulgare L. 8, 9. " On practically all the mountain 

 Limestone ' downs ' on the Mendips ; also on the dunes — more 

 like a casual, here," Moss. 



Stachys palustris x sylvatica {S. ambigua Sm.). 9. Corn- 

 fields, Cheddar, Moss. 



Lamiuvi Galeobdolon Crantz. 1. Winsford. 

 ■•'Chenopodium glaucum L. 9. Brean Down Farm, by the gate 

 that leads from the farmhouse to the ferry ; and on the shingle by 

 the beach. Moss. This plant was found a good many years ago, 

 and was thought to be C. glaucum by Mr. C. Crossland, of Halifax, 

 though it was too young to show the fruit-character well. The 

 foliage alone serves to distinguish glaucum at a glance from our 

 other species, but it seems, as annuals often do, to have at least 

 temporarily disappeared. Mr. White and I made careful in- 

 dependent search, last September, without success ; the only 

 Goosefoot which I could detect was a very small quantity of 

 C. album var. viride, which could not possibly have been mistaken 

 for it. New for Somerset ; but further confirmation is evidently 

 desirable. — '■•C. Vulvaria L. 2. Minehead Warren, 1910, Pugsley. 

 Not previously found south of Bridgewater Bay. — C. murale L. 

 2. Near Dunster Station, Pugsley. Fine and plentiful near the 



