lo Bailey, Adventitious Vegetatwn of St.Anne's-on-tJie-Sea. 



garden at St. Anne's, developed into a stunted, starved 

 plant, quite unlike the naturally grown plants. 



Cyclocoma atriplidfoliuvi, Coulter, (C platyphyllum, 

 Moq.). Another American species, which I could not 

 have made out without assistance from Kew. It is a 

 plant which affects the banks of streams in Manitoba, 

 Indiana, Nebraska, &c. 



Chenopodium vmi'ale, Linn. A British species, but 

 considered a casual at St. Anne's. Mr. J. A. Wheldon 

 has found it at the Wyre Docks, Fleetwood. 



Chenopodium hybridum, Linn. This species was 

 plentiful in one locality only, in 1907, growing with Rubus 

 ccBsins. It had not occurred at this spot during the five 

 previous years. It is a British species, not native at 

 St. Anne's. 



Axyris amarantoides, Linn. A gigantic specimen, 

 from which I was in time to rescue two good examples 

 only ; one of these was presented to Kew, at the request 

 of the herbarium department. I have the plant from 

 Nertschinsk, and from between Omsk and Kurgau, in 

 Siberia, ivhere it is frequent. It is difficult to surmise how 

 it reached St. Anne's. 



PanicHin niiliaceuui, Linn. A moderatelj'' sized colony 

 of this grass has been established in one of the hollows 

 of the sandhills, apparently for some years, but it did not 

 flower until 1907 ; little of it was left in 1908, as road 

 formation had begun. 



PJialaris canariensis, Linn., and P. ininoi; Retz., were 

 not infrequent during the summers of 1907 and 1908. 



