ROSACEA. 133 



11. Tregantle. Maker. Hay Lane, Wilcove, and Merrifield, near 

 Torpoint. St. Mellion. Near Callington. Weir Head. Lan- 

 dulph: "i?. cuspidatoides, Crep. ;" Deseg. Cat. Rais. No. 370. 

 D. III. [Field hedge near Mutley Lane, 1875 ; since destroyed. ] Honic- 

 knowle. Between Pounds and jManadon. Near Tamerton 

 Foliot. Beer Ferrers. Maristow. 

 IV. Thornbury Lane, and elsewhere. Egg Buckland. By the tramway 

 and in bushy spots about Fancy and Darklake. Hemerdon. 

 Between Newnham and Crownhill Down. Hedge near Plyrap- 

 ton : "i?. suhglohosa, Sm." Deseg. ih. No. 38L Valley of the 

 Plym : "i?. Andrzeiowscii, Stev."?*o?. et. ih. No. 385. 



V. Near Worsewell, Revelstoke. Caulstone. Plymouth and Ivy- 



bridge Road, Ellacombe Lane, near Yealm Bridge. Stretchley : 

 "jR. cuspidatoldes, Crep.;" id. et. ih. No. 370. Cornwood. 

 VI. Kingston. Battisborough. Harford, and between that and 

 Cornwood. 



d. scabriiiscula and e. sylvestris. 

 c, I. Between Trewrickle and Pool, 8heviock {scahriuscula). Between 

 Landrake and Pillaton. Notter Valley, near Clapper Bridge 

 {scahriuscula). Near Weard, St. Stephens : with numerous 

 glands on the under side of the leaves, stipules and bracts 

 {sylvestris). In the Tidy Valley, between Heskyn Mill and 

 Cutmere Bridge ; agreeing well with Wood's and Lindley's 

 descriptions of sylvestris. Elmgate, St. Stephens : '■'' R. foetida, 

 Bast." Deseg. ih. No. 358. 

 II. Pill, near Saltash. Border of a field below Hingston Down. 

 Between Ashland and Harrowbarrow, 

 D. III. Between Boxhill and Honicknowle ; also between the latter place 

 and Weston Mills. Budshead. 

 IV. Plymstock, and near Gore. Near Efford Mill, Alderpit, Common 

 Wood, &c., Egg Buckland. Wood below Fancy House. Cann 

 Wood. 

 V. Newton Ferrers, Revelstoke, Bridgend, Brixton, Kitley : " R. 

 foetida, Bast." Deseg. Cat. Rais. No. 358. Between Yealmpton 

 and Ivybridge. 



VI. Flete. Gutsford. :Modbury. 



I am unable to divide the local examples of this Rose further than 

 between clothy-leaved and thm-leaved varieties ; and even these two are 

 connected by a series of forms. It will be seen that we have five of M. 

 Deseglise's species represented under our aggregate tomentosa. The local 

 plants he has w^awQ^foetida are similar to his former Britannica, which 

 is equivalent to the Jutidzilliana of Baker's Review. Mr. Baker now 

 regards this as " essentially the same " as Lindley's sylvestris. {Monog. 



