UNCOMMON) PLANTS IN DEVON) AND: CORNWALL. 311 
at Plymouth.).An alien; probably derived from some garden in the: 
neighbourhood. » July, 1863. iw nesrO 
Cerastium tetrandrum; Curt.— Abundant og a wall at Sutton Road, 
Plymouth; March, 1863. Braunton Burrows; August, 1863. ... 
 Lavatera arborea, L.—Cliffs above Whitsand Bay, between Rame 
Head and Tregantle, Cornwall. Truly indigenous here. . Also in the 
neighbourhood of Plymouth, where it may have escaped from. culti- 
vation. [onoo 
Lathyrus Aphaca, L.— Near Tamerton Foliott. We first found 
this rare plant at this station in 1860, and have seen it either on 
a bank or roadside there every year since that time except 1861... 
Rubus sazatilis, L.—On a bank at Common Wood, Egg Buckland. 
A very satisfactory station, and the only one we know for this plant in 
Devon. . — 
Epilobium lanceolatum, Bab. Man. — Locally abundant on walls 
and in dry or slaty soil; and on limestone-rubble heaps. at several | 
places in the neighbourhood of Plymouth, as at Crab-tree, by the 
Plym, near Cann slate quarry, and at Tamerton Foliott. It also oc- 
curs near Compton Gifford, at Lipson, Stoke Damarell, Cattedown 
(on limestone), Pomphleet, Brixton, ete., and moreover claims ad- 
mittance into the flora of Cornwall, as it grows in an old quarry 
near St. John’s, a village a few miles from Torpoint, Cornwall. We 
have searched for it in vain in the neighbourhood of Ilfracombe, 
North Devon. 
Tillea muscosa, L.—A. notice of our discovery of this plant at 
Colwell; near Rumple Quarry, has been already recorded in the 
Report of the Plymouth Institution for 1861-2, and also in the 
* Phytologist ; ° but as its occurrence in Devon may not be generally 
known to botanists we give it a place in this list, especially as it 
abounds some seasons at this, we believe, its only known station in 
the county. Ty | . 
Orobanche Hedere, Duby.— Combemartin, North Devon. August, 
1863. On Ivy that had rooted in earth on the top of a wall near the 
sea. 
Plantago media, L.—Very rare about Plymouth; the only station 
we know for it in that neighbourhood being Cattedown, where we 
found it tolerably abundant in a pasture, on limestone, in May, 1863. 
Morcurialis annua, var. ambigua, L.—We found this curious monce- 
