274 BORAGINACEiE. 



IV. Chelson :Meadow ; Keys, S. D. Lit. Chron. 324, and Fl iii. 122. 

 Laira. Marsh, Shalaford. Between Saltram and Elburton. 

 Between Elburton and Plympton. Near Plymptun, by the 

 road to Brixton. 



V. Meadow between Lambside and Preston farm-house. Near 



Bridgend. Yeahn Valley, between Kitley and Lee Mill Bridge. 



Near Chittleburn. Blackpool. Near Collaford. Westlake. 

 VI. Strood. Gutsford Bridge. Flete. 

 I tlimk this plant to be of biennial, not perennial, duration. 

 First record : Keys, 1846. 



556. M. repens, Do7i. Creepinrj Water Forget-me-not. 



Native ; in watery and marshy places, in bogs, and by streams. 

 Connnon. June to September, 

 c. I. Near Shillingham and Trematon, St. Stephens. Viverdon Down. 

 II. Between Torpoint and St. Johns. Polbathick. Landrake. Weir 

 Head. 

 D. III. 3Ianadon Wood ; Keyham ; Keys, S. D. Lit. Chron. 324. By 

 the Devonport leat channel at Pennycross. Between Weston 

 Mills and Coombes farm-house. Between Burrington and 

 Manadon. Blaxton. 

 IV. Bovisand, 5a?i^er; Staddon Heights ; Leigham ; Shaugh ; Ke^js, 

 ib. and Fl. iii. 121, 22. Derriford, &c.. Egg Buckland. Newn- 

 ham. Bickleigh. Wigvor Down. 

 V. Green at Westlake. By Kitley Brook, above Ford Cottages. 

 Enclosure below Hanger Down, with pinkish flowers, 1879. 

 Near Cholwichtown. Cornwood, and between that and Iry- 

 bridge. In a bog near the source of Broadall Brook, Dartmoor. 



VI. Between Holbeton and Orcherton. Modbury. Ivybridge. 



So far as I have seen this is the only Water Forget-me-not of the area, 

 except ccespitosa. Until comparatively recently I beheved many plants 

 growing about Plymouth to be 71/. jxikistris, but on being submitted to 

 careful examination, as opportunities occur, they prove one after another 

 to be 31. repent. Some years ago I marked pahistj-is as belonging to East 

 Cornwall and South Devon in a London Catalogue checked for Watson, 

 but as I now believe did so in error, through having mistaken certain 

 examples of the supposed less common repens for it. There are several 

 local stations given ww^qt j^alustris in Keys's Flora, but I do not venture 

 to quote them, as they probably belong to repens, and consequently I am 

 unable to give palustris a place in the Plymouth list. 



557. M. a,rv ensis, Hoffm. Field Forget-me-not. 



Native ; on hedge-banks, in open places in woods, and as a weed 

 in arable land. Very common. April to September. Area 

 general. 



