1863.] HAMPSHIRE PLANTS. 393 



Linaria Cymhalaria. Between the flagstones in front of the 

 hotel in Hayling Island. (This locality exposes the present 

 condition of the island as far as visitors go : it is truly a 

 desert of half-finished houses.) 



Veronica polita. Portsea Island, common. 



Lycopus enropceus. Gomer Pond. 



Salvia vei'benaca. Abundant on the " glacis " of Portsmouth for- 

 tifications. 



Calamintha oficinalis. Hedgebank, east part of Portsea Island. 



Scutellaria galericulata. Gomer Pond. 



Scutellaria minor. South-west corner of Hayling Island. 



Nepeta Cataria. On Portsdown. 



Lamium amplexicaule. On Southsea Common, etc. 



Lysimachia vulgaris. Gomer Pond, abundant. 



Plantago media. Portsdown. 



Amaranthus retroflexus. Waste ground at Southampton. 



Salicornia radicans. Hayling Island, mud flats. 



Atriplex litloralis. Portsea and Hayling Islands, common. 



Atriplex erecta. Cornfields on Portsdown. 



Atriplex angustif alia, f Msi.ntime forms, Hayling and Portsea Is- 



Atriplex hastata (?). \ lands, and shore of Stokes Bay. 



Atriplex deltoidea. Waste place in Portsea Island. 



Atriplex Babingtonii. In the sand on south coast of Hayling 

 Island. 



Atriplex laciniata. On the south coast of Hayling Island. (Only 

 one plant seen.) 



(The maritime plant marked hastata (?) may be the deltoidea 

 <y triangidaris (Willd.) of the ' Manual,^ but I am much 

 puzzled with the sea- shore varieties of this troublesome 

 genus. Some of the specimens of angustifolia gathered on the 

 beach both here and in the Isle of Wight have much broader 

 leaves than the normal form of that plant, and are likely to 

 mislead.) 



Polygonum ampJiibium [floating fo^in) . Gomer Pond. 



Euphorbia portlandica. I only gathered one plant of this in 

 Stokes Bay, though Dr. Brorafield says it is there " very 

 abundant and luxuriant.^^ 



Mercurialis annua yS ambigua. Southampton. This plant Avas 

 little more than a monoecious form of annua, though the 

 leaves were rather narrower than the usual state of the plant. 



N.S. VOL. VI. 3 E 



