WOODRUFFE-PEACOCK : CATALOGUE OF LINCOLNSHIRE PLANTS. oI 
PAPAVERACE. 
Papaver somniferum L. An escaped alien. N.—Mable- 
thorpe; Mr. J. Burtt Davy, 1885. Coningsby; Rev. F. S. 
Alston, 1893. 
Vars. hispidum H.C. W., and glabrum H.C.W. N.—Mable- 
thorpe; ‘a well-established colonist and plentiful’; Mr. H. 
Fish, 8-1887. Fisher Herb. 
Papaver Rhceas L.t Native. Common on sandy and ‘light 
soils,’ N.and§S. The following colour varieties are preserved 
in the County Herb. :—N.—Hatton; Mrs. Jarvis—a light mauve. 
N.—Wispington ; Rev. F. S. Alston—a dark purple. The 
purely scarlet and the scarlet with a dark purple spot on each 
petal are often found in the same patch of plants. 
Var. strigosum Boenn. N.—Rasen; Rev. W. Fowler, 1877. 
Herb. Brit. Mus. 
Papaver dubium Lamot.}+ Native. Fairly common N. and S, 
Var. Lecogu Lamot. $§.—JIn a cornfield between Littleworth 
and the South Drove Drain; Mr. W. H. Beeby, Jour. Bot., 
1884, p. 18. The sap was yellow but capsule scarcely satis- 
factory. The true variety will turn up, I do not doubt, as it was 
common enough in Northamptonshire! in 1886-90, and looked 
native enough. 
Papaver Argemone L.t Native. Fairly common N, and S, 
Var. glabrum F. A. Lees. N.— Fast of Rasen, on —. 
more abundant than P. y Hthes or PF. Rheas; Mr. F. A. 
Lee, BRC. 18792... Be oten: | Standen res grey and 
glaucous underneath when growing! Mature capsules often 
quite glabrous.’ sa ats ir ileal ; Mr. J. Burtt Davy, 
NVat., 1891, p. 41. Brit. Mus. Her 
PAPAVER HYBRIDUM L, Alien. ae Rev. W. Fowler, 
Nat., 1889, p. 353- 
MECONOPSIS CAMBRICA Vig. An alien, or _— escape. N.— 
Gainsborough neighb. ; Rev. R. H. Charters’ MS 
Giaucivum FLavum Crantz. Recorded * —Mablethorpe ; 
Mr. J. Larder, Wesley Naturalist, 1887, p. 283. Skegness; 
Mr. F. A. Lees’ Outline Flora. He adds in a footnote: ‘ Ticked 
by me in an early-made Catalogue of Plants seen in Lincs. (for 
Skegness Sands), but no specimen kept, and I have no clear 
recollection of the fact. It occurs at Brancaster and Holme 
Point, Norfolk, twelve miles off, across the Wath.—F. A. L.’ 
March 184. | 
