CALYCLFLOILE. 33 



feathery appearance. Meadfoot Cliffs. Hope's Nose. (E. B. t. 

 944.) 'A. vn.-ix. 



6. T. striatuxn (soft-knotted T.) In dry pastures and wasto 

 places. Whole plant softly hairy ; stem from 4 to 10 inches 

 long, more or less spreading ; leaflets obovate. Flower-heads 

 terminal and axillary, small, oval or globular ; flowers very small, 

 pale red ; calyx with 5 short, awl-shaped teeth, Paignton Green. 

 (E. B. t, 1813.) A. Vi. vii. 



7. T. scabrum (rough rigid T.} In sandy pastures and waste 

 places near the sea. Somewhat like the last, but more prostrate 

 and not so hairy ; leaflets not so broad, and the flower-heads more 

 in the axils of the leaves, and very rigid when in fruit ; flowers 

 very pale. Paignton sands. .Kerswell down. (E. B. t. 903.) A. 

 V.-YII. 



8. T. glomeratum (smooth round-headed T.) On dry heaths> 

 in pastures and waste grounds. A small, slender, spreading plant, 

 very much like T. scabrum, but with rounder heads and flowers 

 of a much brighter pink ; corolla very small, yet longer than the 

 calyx-teeth. Ellacombe. Ilsham Down. Exmouth sands. (E. 

 B. t. 1063.) A. vi. 



9. T. suffocatum (suffocated T.) Sandy seashores, rare. A 

 very small plant with prostrate stems, seldom more than 2 inches 

 long ; leaflets obovate, on slender footstalks. Flowers very small, 

 closely sessile, in minute dense heads, which are crowded along 

 the slender stems quite close to the' ground. Mound at Ella- 

 combe. Paignton Green. Teignmouth Den. (E. B. t. 1049.) 

 A. vi. 



10. T. subterraneum (subterranean T.) In dry, gravelly 

 or sandy pastures. Stem from 3 to 8 inches long, prostrate, 

 hairy ; leaflets obovate on long leafstalks. Flowers almost white, 

 long, and very slender, in heads of 2 or 3, on axillary, lateral 

 stalks, which after flowering become elongated and turn down- 

 wards, and by means of the 5 spreading teeth, which arise and 

 surround the calyx, the fruit is buried in the ground. Ellacombe. 

 Chapel Hill. Paignton Green. Kerswell down, Teignmouth 

 (Miss Champernowne). (E. B. 1. 1048.) A. v. vi. 



11. T. fragiferum (Strawberry -headed T.) In pastures and 

 meadows. Plant in habit and appearance resembling T. repens, 

 but differing in the flower-heads, which consist of numerous 

 closely sessile flowers, surrounded by a much divided involucre, 

 and the calyx, after flowering, becomes dilated and coloured, so 

 that the fruiting head has much the appearance of a Strawberry. 

 Torre Abbey meadows. Goodrington Marsh. (E. B. t. 1050 V .) 

 P. vn. vin. 



12. T. procumbens (Hop T.) In dry pastures and borders 



D 



