ADDITIONAL NOTES, ETC. WT) 



109. Cheiranthus Cheiri, vol. i. p. 155. 



Provinces (6) and (9) may be added to the area of this 

 alien species: which, strangely enough, Mr. Babington 

 enters in his Manual as an unchallenged native. 



114. Brassica campestris, vol. i. p. 158. 



Provinces 6 and 9 may be added in the area ; that of 

 South Wales on authority of Mr. C. C. Babington and 

 Mr. James Motley ; that of Mersey on authority of Dick- 

 inson's Flora of Liverpool. Mr. Pascoe finds this and 

 B. Napus common in Cornwall, " subject to the usual 

 doubts about these species." 



114*. Brassica Eapa, vol. i. p. 160. (No. 114, b.) 

 Provinces (6) and (16) may be added to those on record 

 for this plant of cultivation, if worth while to add to re- 

 cords of no probable use. 



115. Brassica Napus, vol. i. p. 160. 



Provinces 7 and 9 may be added in the area, on autho- 

 rity of the Floras of Anglesea and Liverpool. For the 

 county of Cornwall, see ' B. campestris ' above. It would 

 perhaps be the better plan to consider that we have only 

 two wild species of Brassica in Britain, B. oleracea the 

 denizen and B. campestris the colonist; the cultivated 

 Turnip and Rape being varieties of the latter, and not 

 wild plants. 



117. Sinapis alba, vol. i. j). 161. 



Provinces 6 and 9 may be added in the area ; the former 

 on authority of Mr. Motley and Dr. Falconer ; the latter 

 on authority of Dickinson's Flora of Liverpool. It would 

 perhaps be the better course to enter this species as an 

 alien in the two most northerly provinces (17 18) at least. 



118. Sinapis nigra, vol. i. p. 162. 



Provinces 9 and 10 maj' be added in the area ; that of 

 Mersey on authority of Mr. J. T. Syme and the Flora of 



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