FLOWERING PLANTS. 87 
Rubus rusticanus, Merc. 
Native. First record: Rogers, 1898. 
Very common, and at least as variable as in England. 
Rubus laciniatus, Willd. 
Native. First record: Rogers, 1898. 
Quarry near Petit Bot Bay: not quite the usual form. [7Z7rans. 
Guern. Soc. Nat. Sc., 1898, p. 296.] 
Rubus macrophyllus, Wh. and N. Var. Schlechtendaliz, 
Weihe. 
Native. First record: Rogers, 1898. 
Rather frequent. St. Sampson’s. St. Martin’s. Fermain Bay. 
A very glandular form. [In Journ. Bot. loc. cit. Mr. Rogers recorded 
this bramble as ‘ var. mcrophylloides, very near Schlechtendali ;’ Dut 
in a subsequent list made out and published in Zyans. Guernsey Soc. 
Nat. Sc., 1898, p. 296, he names it without query as above. | 
Rubus Sprengelii, Weihe. 
Native. First record: Rogers, 1898. 
Fermain Bay: quite typical. 
Rubus leucostachys, Schleich. 
Native. First record: Rogers, 1898. 
As an aggregate species abundant in Guernsey, though usually in 
an untypical form. Var. azgustifolius, Rogers. Fermain Bay. 
Nearly allied to R. Zeucostachys, and considered by Dr. Focke to 
be also near 2. argyranthus, Boul. and Luc. are plants which occur 
in some quantity at Les Norgiots, St. Andrews; but these demand 
further study. 
Rubus Boraeanus, Genev. . 
Native. First record: Rogers, 1898. 
Lane above Glatney Esplanade, St. Peter Port: a form with 
very few pricklets on faces of stem, and an abnormally prickly 
panicle. St. Sampson’s: a plant which also seems to go best under 
this species. 
Rubus Borreri, Bell-Salt. 
Native. First record: Rogers, 1898. ; 
Abundant and characteristic near Vale Castle. In quarries 
‘between St. Sampson’s and Lancresse (var. dentatifolius, or near it), 
.and in lanes near Ville au Roi. 
Rubus radula, Weihe. Var. azglicanus, Rogers. 
Native. First record: Rogers, 1898. 
In Journ. Bot. loc. cit. this bramble is noted for Jersey only, but 
in a later list in Zrans. Guernsey Soc. Nat. Sc., 1898, p. 296, Mr. 
Rogers records it as found at Fermain Bay. 
