132 YORKSHIRE NATURALISTS' UNION. 



181. S. anglica. English catchfly. Gravelly places and 

 cornfields, not common. Plentiful in cornfields 

 near Leckby Carr, 1881. 



185. S. nutans. Nottingham catchfly. On calcareous rocks. 

 Abbey plain, Knaresborough, on rocks (Baines). 



187. S. noctiflora. Night-flowering catchfly. Fields and 



banks, not uncommon. 



188. Lychnis vespertina. White campion. Fields, com- 



mon. 



189. L. diurna. Red campion. Woods and fields, com- 



mon. 



190. L. Flos-cuculi. Ragged robin. Wet places, common. 

 193. L. Githago. Corn cockle. Cornfields, local. 



198. Cerastium semi -decandrum. Little mouse-ear 



chickweed. Waysides, etc., abundant. 



199. C. glomeratum. Clustered mouse ear. Waysides and 



fields, not so common as last. 



200. C. triviale. Narrow-leaved mouse-ear. Fields, abund- 



ant. 

 203. C. arvense. Field mouse-ear. Not uncommon in 

 gravelly places. A more glabrous variety, with 

 large flowers, often solitary, and rigid growth, is var. 

 suffruticulosum L. 



205. Stellaria aquatica. Water chickweed. Marshes and 



wet places, not common. Sharow Mires. 



206. S. nemorum. Wood stitchwort. Damp shady woods, 



not common. Clotherholrae (Miss Morton) ; Mack- 

 ershaw ; Hackfall (Baines). 



207. S. media. Chickweed. Everywhere abundant. Var. 



Borceana sparingly on sandy places by the Ure. 



208. S. Holostea. Stitchwort. Abundant everywhere. 



209. S. glauca. Bog stitchwort. Wet places, not common. 



Sharow Mires, 



210. S. graminea. Grass-leaved stitchwort. Woods and 



hedges, pretty common. 



Trans. Y.N.U., 1882 (pub. 1SS3). Series E 



