COMPOSITE 117 



thoroughly estabhshed in several places on old walls 

 near villages. 



Hieraciuin aurantiaciun, L. Native of the Alps of 

 Southern Europe. An old garden favourite. Often 

 thoroughly and abundantly naturalised near gardens. 



Hieracium chondrilloides, Vill. A native of bushy 

 hills in Central Europe. Sometimes recorded as a 

 garden escape in England. 



Hieracium maculatum, Schrank. A rather widely 

 cultivated garden plant which has frequently been 

 recorded as naturalised on walls and waste ground 

 near gardens. 



Hieracium praealtum, Vill. Once recorded by Mr. 

 Craig Christie as plentiful on roadsides near Edinburgh 

 {Botanical Record Club Report, 1877). It is a native of 

 Central and Southern Europe, presumably of garden 

 origin in this locality. 



[Hypochseris glabra, L. With a few exceptions this 

 species has been universally recorded in local Floras 

 from cultivated ground, but it is truly native on open 

 sandy commons in most counties of Southern England.] 



[Inula britannica, L. Recorded by Mr, Mott in the 

 Botanical Exchange Club Report for 1895 as naturalised 

 on the shore of Cropstone Reservoir near Leicester. It 

 is indigenous in marshes and on river banks from 

 Normandy and Belgium to the Orient, and if, as seems 

 possible, the seeds were introduced by migratory water- 

 fowl, the species may be regarded as a native.] 



