132 CONTRIBUTIONS TO A FLORA OF PORTLAND. 



have been mistaken " ; T. B. Flower, in litt. It may 

 probably have been destroyed here by the Great 

 Storm, 23rd Novr., 1824. 



Chenopodium Vulvaria, L. Stinking Goose-foot. Probably 



native. I. Rather com. II. Roadsides Castleton, etc. 



C. murale, L. Nettle-leaved Goose-foot. Native or colonist. 



I. Freq. II. Wakeham. Southwell to near the Bill. 

 C. urbicum, L. Upright Goose-foot. Colonist. II. Very 

 rare. Manure heap, Fortune's Well ; Revd. H. E. Fox 

 in Flo. Dor. Ed. 2, p. 228. 



Obs. This record is open to doubt. C. rubrum is very 

 partial to manure heaps, and has often been confused 

 with C. urbicum. 



C. rubrum, L. Red Goose-foot. Var. pseudo-botryoides, 

 Wats. Native. II. Near Lower Lighthouse ; Mansel- 

 Pleydell in Flo. Dor. Ed. 2, p. 227. 



06s. Having regard to the habitat, perhaps a dwarf 



state only of C. rubrum. 



Beta maritima, L. Sea- Beet. Native. Com. I. Chesil 

 Bank ; Pulteney. Smallmouth sands. II. Cliffs, 

 abundant. 

 Atriplex littoralis, L. Grass-leaved Sea Orache. Native. 



I. Rare. " Sandy shores at Portland ; " Pulteney. 

 Railway banks, Smallmouth to Chesil, sparingly. 



Obs. Var. marina, L., apparently absent. 

 A. deltoidea, Bab. Triangular-leaved Orache. Native. I. 



II. Freq. Gardens and cult, ground extending to Bill ; F. ! 

 Var. salina Bab. I. and II. Com. on sea-sand and 



shingle. 



A. Babingtonii, Woods. Babinglon's Orache. Native. I. 

 Com. Sands close to the Bridge (the small form). Shore 

 Smallmouth to Chesil (green and fleshy form, var. virescens, 

 Lange}. Bright red state observed on Mere beach. 



A. portulacoides, L. Sea Purslane. Native. I. South-east 

 shore of Mere, abundant. 



Salicornia europaea, L. (spec, collect.) Glasswort. Marsh- 

 Samphire. Native. I. Com. 



