1 8 NOTES ON THE DORSET FLORA. 



Stations recorded under R. umbrosus in the Flora ; about 

 Parkstone ; Branksome Park ; Heatherlands ; Longfleet ; 

 Edmondsham ; Verwood. — R. villicauHs, var. Selmeri (Lindeb.), 

 abundant between Talbot Village and Kinson ; Heatherlands ; 

 Broadstone ; Verwood. — R. leucandrus, Focke, Parkstone ; 

 Newtown ; Kinson ; Heatherlands. G. Creech. — R. Queslierii, 

 Lefv. and Muell., Foxholes Wood, in some plenty ; very rare 

 elsewhere. — R. miurotiaius, Blox., var. nudicaidis, Rogers, 

 Lilliput ; Kinson ; Broadstone ; Corfe Mullen ; Foxholes Wood ; 

 Martin Wood, near Cranborne. To this variety all the localities in 

 the Flora of Dorset may be assigned ; the type is a Midland plant 

 as a rule. — R. anglosaxonicus, Gelert, Corfe Mullen ; Foxholes 

 Wood ; south of Hartgrove. — R. radula, Weihe, var. anglicanus, 

 Rogers. To this variety probably should be assigned all the 

 localities for R. radula in the Flora. I add Kinson ; Newtown ; 

 near Poole Cemetery. G. Creech. — R. melanodei-mis, Rogers, 

 near Coy Pond, Bournemouth, on both sides of the county 

 boundary. G. Creech. — R. Lejeutiii, W. and N., var. ericelorum, 

 Lefv., in Alderholt, not far from Fordingbridge Station ; not in 

 the Flora and scarce in Dorset. — R. Bloxamii, Lees, well 

 distributed in the east of the county ; Kinson ; Newtown ; 

 Foxholes Wood ; Corfe Mullen ; abundant near Verwood Station 

 and on the eastern side of Edmondsham. R. Kahki-i, Weihe. 

 E. Piddle Wood; possibly the same spot as Mr. Rogers' "near 

 Sturminster Newton." — Besides these Edmondsham can show a 

 few of the commonest brambles — R. idcetis, L., R. pulcherrimus, 

 Neuman, R. rusticanus, Merc, R. macrophyllus, W. and N., R. 

 leucoslachys, Schleich., R. diimetoriim, W. and N., and R. aesius, 

 L. — but it can boast of very few of the rarer species compar- 

 atively. 



Geum rivale x urbanum (G. intermedium, Ehrhart), occurs 

 on the verge of moist woodland in two places at Edmondsham 

 half-a-mile apart, where both the species grow near together. 

 There are only three localities for this hybrid in the Flora. — 

 Potetitilla repians x silveslris, by the side of the railway more 

 than half-a-mile north of Verwood Station, and also near the 



