92 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
t 
as at Oxwich, Llanmadoe, &c. 
<avatera arborea L. is treated by Mr. Dunn as “ presumably 
non-indigenous.” But it is aboriginal on the remotest and wildest 
pee a the cliffs of Gower; and it looks just the same about the 
ard. 
type) are all on 
much the same footing with many other plants of this List; they occur 
gr 
of cases. G. pusillum is often enough a plant of the seashore sand 
to deserve some recognition as a native of Britain ; it occurs on 
Sketty Burrows, &c., in Glamorgan. 
“uonymus europeus Li. is so often a plant of woods and copses, 
and of cliff faces, on calcareous soil (e.g. in Glamorgan), that even 
though it is sometimes planted, its claim to full indigeneity is very 
strong. It has, I take it, no more right to appear in the List than 
Crategus Oxyacantha. 
Vicia lutea Li. is denied all claim to the indigenous status. But 
