182 RUBIACEiE. 



between the latter place and Wembiiry. In many places in 

 the parish of Brixton. Between Bridgend and Gala Cross. 

 About Puslinch and Yealmpton. By the Plymouth and Ivy- 

 bridge Road, near Lee Mill Bridge. 

 VI. Kingston. Near Orcherton. Penquit, Ermington. 

 One of the strikingly local species in the area. Although apparently 

 partial to limestone, its occurrence does not depend on the presence of 

 this rock ; for we have beds of limestone without the plant, and elsewhere 

 the plant Avithout the limestone. 

 First record : Jacob, 1835. 



356. G. verum, Z. Yelloiv Bedstraw. 



Native ; in dry or sandy pastures, on commons, and in open waste 

 spots. Common. July, August. 

 c. I. Port Wiinkle. Heath on the Quethiock side of Clapper Bridge. 

 II. Whitsaud Bay ! plentifully ; Jacob, Fl. part 3. Between Mill- 

 brook and Southdown. About Torpoint. Penhale. 

 D. III. Devil's Point, Stonehouse. King's Tamerton, and near Bull 

 Point. Blaxton, &c., Tamerton Foliot. Roborough Down. 

 IV. At Cattedown ; Staddon Heights ; on the rocks of the Hoe, and 

 elsewhere about Pl3rmouth ; Keys, Fl. m. 51. Near Radford 

 Quarry, and elsewhere on the limestone between Plymouth and 

 Elburton. Thornbury. Between Longbridge and Plymbridge. 

 Ruins of Plympton Castle. Between Shaugh Bridge and 

 Bickleigh village. 

 V. Wembury. Revelstoke, above the coast and near Worsewell. 

 VI. By Bigbury Bay, below Kingston. Mothecombe. Ivybridge. 



h. ochroleucum; Boswell-Syrae, E. B. ed. 3. vero-elatum; Baker 

 and Foggitt ; Rejy. Bot. Ex. Club, 1865, 9. 



c. II. A patch for about a yard on a bank near Lugger's Cave, Whitsand 

 Bay, with typical verum and Mollugo growing near, 1869. 



D. V. In two places on the sea-bank at Revelstoke ; at each near both 

 G. verum and G. Mollugo, 1875, Three patches in turfy 

 ground at Wembury, near the Yealm Ferry ; and another at 

 some distance, also above the estuary ; near the two supposed 

 parents at each spot. Here, at Wembury, two forms ; one by 

 its comparatively broad leaves and general look considerably 

 more like Mollugo than was the other, 1875. On the edge of 

 a low cliff between Wembury and Bovisand, near verum and 

 Mollugo, 1865. 

 VI. Rather sparingly with the typical plant at Meadowfoot Cove, 



Mothecombe, 1873. 

 I believe tliis G. ochroleucum to be a hybrid between G. verum and G. 



