190 ROSACEAE 



provisionally called F. bercheriensis be of hybrid origin or a variety of 

 F. vesca, or a sub-species bearing the same relation to F. vesca as 

 J^. dicmetorum does to F. collina. Probably this plant is occasionally 

 reported as F. elaiior. 



T. muricata, Linn. Sp. PI. 495 (1753''. Mill. Gard. Diet. ed. 8 (1768). 



The Haufbois Strawberry. 

 F. moschata et cUoica, Duchesne, Hist. Nat. Frais. 145 (1766). F. magna, 



Thuill, Fl. Par. od, 2, 254. F. elaiior, Ehrh. Beitr. vii. 23 (1792). 

 Comp. Cyb. Br. 501. Syme, E. B. iii. 156, t. 439. Nyman, 222. 



Fl. Oxf. 100. 

 Alien or denizen. Hedge-banks. Very rare. P. May-June. 

 First found in Berkshire by the author in 1886. 



3. Pang. Near De la Bere, Pangbourn, Tufnail. 



4. Kennet. Near Kintbury. 



5. lioddon. In a hedge opposite the Whitening Factory at Warren 



Eovv^j Stanton. The hedge is the border of an old orchard, and 

 the plant, which does not appear to be in the orchard, has 

 extended itself into the adjoining bushy common. Between 

 Windsor and Cranbourn Park. 



**P. CHiLOENSis, Duchesne, Hist. Nat. Frais. 165 (1766). 



F. vesca, var. chiloenais, Linn. Sp. PI. 494 (1753)- 

 Alien. This escape from cultivation is occasionally found in a semi-wild 

 state, on hedge-banks and on railway-banks, &c. P. May- August. 

 2. Ock. Near the railway at Didcot. 4. Kennet. Newbury. Near 



Kintbury. 5. Loddon. Bracknell. Ascot. Sandhurst. Maidenhead. 



POTE!N"TILLA, Linn. Gen. n. 559 {Quinquefolium, Tournefort, 



Inst. t. 153). 



**P. NOKVEGicA, Linn. Sp. PI. 499 (x753)- Suppl. E. B. ed. 3, 71, t. 435a. 



Alien. Waste places. Rare. P. July-September. 



5. Loddon. In a hedge near Twyford, and on a waste heap near the 

 Railway Station in 1890. A solitary large plant by the watery ditch 

 in a thick hedge between Blackwater and Sandliurst ; no other intro- 

 duced plant near. 



P. Pragariastrum, Ehrh. Herb. 146 (1789), and ex Hall. f. in Ser. 



Mus. Helv. i. (181 8) 49. Barrert Strawberry. 

 P. prostrata, Moench. Meth. 659 (1794). P. sterilis, Garcke, Fl. Deutsch. 



ed. 4, 112 (1856). Fragaria sterilis, Linn. Sp. PI. 495 (i753)- 

 Top. Bot. 134. Syme, E. B. iii. 143, t. 427. Nyman. 228. Fl. Oxf. 102. 

 Native. SylvestraL Woods, hedge-banks, heaths, &c. Common and 



generally distributed. P. January-November. 

 First record. Fragaria sterilis, Mavor's Agr. Berks, 1809. Bagley Wood, 



Baxter's MS. 1823. 



It is a little doubtful if the publication of Ehrhart's name dates from the 

 issue of the Herb, in 1789. If that be not a valid publication, then the oldest 



