u] Peculiar to, or characteristic of, the Forest. 



291 



GLYCERIA MARITIMA, M. and K., 

 Sea Hard Grass. Mudeford, 1323. 



GLYCERIA LOLIACEA, Watson, Dwarf 

 Sea-wheat Grass. " Mudeford. On 

 the New Forest side of the Avon, 

 which is the only place I have ever 

 seen it." Rev. H. M. Wilkinson, 1327. 



TRITICUM JUNCEUM, Lin., Rushy Sea- 

 wheat Grass. Mudeford, 1362. 



HORDEUM MARITIMUM, With., Sea 



Barley. Very common along the whole 

 of the east coast. " By the roadside 

 from Cadenham " (more probably 

 Hythe) " to Marchwood," W. A. Brom- 

 field. See Watson's New Botanist's 

 Guide, vol. ii., p. 571.; 1369.f 



LEPTORUS FILIFORMIS, Trin., Sea 

 Hard-grass. Mudeford, 1371. 



In the next division are placed more especially those plants whieli 

 either grow only in the Forest, or form a peculiar feature in its land- 

 scapes, such as Eriophorum angustifolium, Gentiana Pneumonanthe, 

 Drosera rotundifolia, and intermedia, Narthecium ossifragum, Melittis 

 Melissophyllum, and the Carices, AircB, and Agrostes generally. The 

 rest will be found in the third division, as common both to the Forest 

 and the adjoining districts. As the Ferns and St. John's -worts 

 have been so fully mentioned in Chapter XXI., they will not be again 

 noticed. 



Lily. Forest streams. Not so com- 

 mon as the next, but still a feature, 36. 



NUPHAR LUTEUM, Sm., Yellow 



Water Lily. In the Avon, and else- 

 where in the district, 37. 



VIOLA CANINA, Sm., Dog's Violet. 

 The violet of the Forest, but, of course, 

 common in the district, 135. 



VIOLA LACTEA, Sm., Cream-coloured 

 Violet. " Near Boldre," W. A. Brom- 

 field. See Watson's New Botanist's 

 Guide, vol. ii., p. 567 ; 135.* 



DROSERA ROTUNDIFOLIA, Lin., 

 Round-leaved Sundew. Everywhere 

 in the Forest, 138. 



DROSERA INTERMEDIA, Hayn., Nar- 

 row-leaved Sundew. Though not so com- 

 mon as rotundifolia, it is equally distribut- 

 ed throughout the Forest district, 139. 



POLYGALA VULGARIS, Lin., Common 

 Milkwort, 141. 



MCENCHIA ERECTA, Sm., Upright 

 Moenchia. Common, 166. 



SAGINA SUBULATA, Wimm., Ciliated 

 Awl-shaped Spurrey, 170.* 



ANEMONE NEMOROSA, Lin., Wood 

 Anemone, 6. 



RANUNCULUS AQUATILIS, Lin., Water 

 Crowfoot. Streams and pools, not of 

 course confined to the Forest, but still 

 a conspicuous feature, 1 1. 



RANUNCULUS TRIPARTITUS, D. C., 

 Three-parted-leaved Crowfoot, " with 

 Limosella aquatica, in splashy places by 

 the roadside, just beyond the bridge, 

 as you leave Brockenhurst for Lynd- 

 hurst," H. C. Watson, in a private 

 letter, 11 * 



RANUNCULUS HIRSUTUS, Curt., Hairy 

 Crowfoot. Roads in the Forest, 22. 



CALTHA PALUSTRIS, Lin., Common 

 Marsh Marigold. Forest pools ; but, 

 of course, in the district generally, 26. 



AQUILEGIA VULGARIS, Lin., Common 

 Columbine. Very common round 

 Wootton, but may be found with Hy- 

 pericum androscemum in the old woods 

 of Mark Ash, Gibb's Hill, Winding 

 Shoot, and Boldrewood, 31. 



NYMPH^EA ALBA, Lin., White Water 



t Scirpus parvulus (R. and S.), mentioned by Rev. G. E. Smith as growing 

 " on a mud-flat near Lymington," is now extinct. See Watson's Cybele Britan- 

 nica, vol. iii. p. 78 ; and Bromfield, in the Phytologist, vol. iii., 1028. 



P P 2 



