GRAMINA. 357 



c. I. A rather small patch on the right bank of the Notter, close to 



Clapper Bridge, 1874. 

 D. IV. In a swamp just at the source of Torey Brook, below Shell Top, 



Dartmoor. 



767. C. vesicaria, L. Biadder Sedrje. 



Native ; in shallow water and wet ground. Very rare. May. 



D. III. Banks of Tamar ; Hore, Keys, Fl. iii. 266 ; seen at Weir Head, 

 1871. In abundance in damp and wet spots in a meadow 

 near Tavistock, below the turnpike road thence to Plymouth, 

 1880. 



C. Oederi, Ehrh. " Common. Shaugh ; Tavistock ; " Keys, Fl. iii. 263. 

 Error probably, m all cases, through C. fiava, h, lepidocai-pa, having 

 been mistaken for it. 



GRAMI NA. 



SETARIA, Beauv. 



768. S. viridis, Beauv. Green Bristle-Grass. 



Casual or Alien ; in cultivated ground, &c. Very rare. August 

 to October, 

 c. II. jVIany plants m a field of mangold wurzel between Trevol and 

 Antony ; also in considerable quantity among turnips in 

 . another field in that neighbourhood, 1876. 

 D. IV. A plant or two in a potato-plot close to Laira Terrace, Plymouth, 

 August, 1876. Three by the footpath of the timipike road, 

 near Marsh MUls, Plympton St. Mary, August, 1876. 

 Scarcely entitled to a place m the Plymouth list. 



ANTHOXANTHUM, L. 



769. A. odoratum, L. Sweet-scented Vernal Grass. 



Native ; in pastures, woods, on commons, moors, and banks. Very 

 common. April to Jmie. Area general. 

 One of the commonest grasses ; fomid all over the country, in the 

 churchyard of St. Andrew, Plymouth, and on Dartmoor. The var. villo- 

 sum occurs. 



A . Puelii, Lee. et Lamt. Casual ? In two contiguous oat-fields, and 

 in a third neighbouring one, on the sea-bank above Bigbury Bay, near 

 Lambside (District v.), 1875. The fields when the grass was found 

 seemed to have been sown with fodder plants to succeed the oat crop, so 

 it is not at all unlikely that the Anthoxanthum was introduced with the 



