lee: flora of dewsbury. 231 



344. Trifolium medium Huds. Meadow clover. Copse, 



Soothill. Not common. 

 347. Trifolium incarnatum L. Crimson clover. Margin 



of clover-field, Savile Town. 



357. Trifolium hybridum L. Alsike clover. Fields, in- 



troduced with clover. 



358. Trifolium repens L. White clover. 



362. Trifolium procumbens L. Hop trefoil. Waste 



ground, not uncommon. 



363, Trifolium dubium Sibth. Lesser yellow trefoil. 

 366. Lotus corniculatus L. Bird's-foot trefoil. 



368. Lotus uliginosus Schk. Greater Bird's-foot trefoil. 

 Moist places. 



381. Vicia hirsuta Koch. Common tare. Hedgebanks. 



384. Vicia Cracca L. Tufted vetch. 



387, Vicia sepium L. Bush vetch. 



391. Vicia sativa L. Common vetch. Dry bank, Stocks 

 Moor. 



392B. Vicia angustifolia var. Vicia bobartii Forst. Dry 

 bank, Coxley Valley. 



399. Lathyrus pratensis L. Meadow vetchling- 



405. Lathyrus macrorrhizus Wimm. Tuberous Bitter 

 vetch. 



4o6|. Scorpiurus vermiculatus. European caterpillar- 

 vetch. One plant in a garden, Batley. Would 

 doubtless have come in waste woollen material, used 

 as manure (J. A. Erskine Stuart). 



407. Prunus communis Huds. Sloe. Crigglestone. 



408. Prunus insititia L. (sub-sp.). Bullace. Some years 



ago, an old Botanist (W. Smith, Dewsbury), knew it 

 in a hedgerow, where Oxford Road now is. 



410. Prunus Avium L. Gean. Planted in a copse, at 



Mirfield. 



411. Prunus cerasus L. Wild cherry. Coxley Valley; 



Howley. 



