no HYPERICACEAE 



Park Place, Stanton. Farley Hill. Ambarrow. Bagshot Heath. 

 Sandhurst. Sunningdale. Bracknell. Risely. Finchampstead. 

 Twyford. Bearwood. Stubbing's Heath. Windsor Park. 

 H. pulchrum is found in all the bordering counties. 



K. hirsutum, Linn. Sp. PI. 786 (1753). Hairy St. John's Wort. 

 Androsaemon hirsutum, C. B. Pin. 280. 



Top. Bot. 91. Syme, E. B. ii. 157, t. 274. Nyman, 133. Fl. Oxf. 62. 



Native. Sylvestral. Woods, coppices, hedgerows, &c. Widely dis- 

 tributed and a very abundant plant in our woods, especially those 

 on the Clay, Oolite, and Chalk. P. June-September. 



First record. Sonning, Mr. S. Rudge, 1800, Herh. Brit. Mus. H. hirsutum, 

 Dr. Noehden, Mavor's Agr. Berks, 1809. 

 H. hirsutum, which occurs in all the bordering counties, is too common 



and generally distributed to need an enumeration of localities. It 



occurs in almost every parish in Berkshire. 



H. montanum, Linn. Fl. Suec. ed. 2, 266 (1755), Sp. PI. ed. 2, 1105 (1762). 

 Top. Bot. 92. Syme, E. B. ii. 158, t. 275. Nyman, 132. Fl. Oxf. 62. 

 Native. Sylvestral. Locally common, but almost confined to the 



woods on the Chalk. P. July-September. 

 First record. Hypericum elegantissimum non ramosum folio lato. In ye pits 



about the middle of Early field and in ye land on ye right hand 



side of Lodden bridge 3 miles from Reding, MS. in Ray's Catalogus 



ahout 1680. 



2. Ock. Bagley Wood, BoswelJ, 1857. On the dry banks above 



Blewbury, Lousley in Russell's Cat. 



3. Pang. Streatley, Pamplin. Ilsley. Knowl Hill. Sulham. 



Shorter's Hill, Pangbourn, Tufnail. Basildon. Near Tidmarsh. 

 5. Loddon. Early, MS. in Ray, 1. c. Bisham Wood, Wargrave, Britt. 

 Contr. Finchampstead woods, Penny. Remenham, Stanton. Very 

 abundant in the grounds of Park Place. Plentiful in woods near 

 Culham Court. Hurley. Between Stubbing's Heath and Ashley 

 Hill. 

 H. montanum is recorded for all the bordering counties, but for Wilt- 

 shire recent corroboration of its occurrence is needed. 



H. elodes, Grufb. in Linn. Amoen. Acad. iv. 105 (1754), and Huds. 

 Fl. Angl, 292 (1762). Marsh St. John's Wort. 



Elodes palustr is, Spach. in Ann. Sc. Nat., Ser. 2, v. (1836) 172. 



Top. Bot. 92. Syme, E. B. ii. 159, t. 276. Nyman, 134. Fl. Oxf. 64. 



Native. Uliginal. Wet places on heaths, marshy margins of pools in 

 heathy situations. Very local and confined to the heathlands of 

 the southern parts of the Pang, the Kennet, and the Loddon 

 districts. P. June-September. 



