314 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
aw 58 eouicle) F.A.R.:; near Horrabridge, Briggs (1879) 
and Ff. A 
Bus a ctus gees Certainly uncommon. 3. Doddiscomb- 
sleigh, gate Bickleigh Vale, Briggs and Focke. y R. Taw 
at Sticklepath; near the foot of the Lydford Waterfall. Very 
luxuriant in ee places. 
ogersit Linton. 3. Moreton-Hampstead, marshy hillside, 
1881. Its first known Na and the only place in the county 
where it has yet been fou 
RR. sulcatus Vest. 3. ion Hill, a Us: Abnormally small, 
but otherwise characteristic. The only other Devon locality 
known is “by Thornbury and Holsworthy Road” (at the other 
end of the ates. whence Mr. Briggs brought me specimens 
in 1885. 
R. plicatus Wh. & N. Apparently quite local. 3. Near Moreton- 
Hampstead ; anee Heath. Chagford, Briggs. Roborough Down, 
near Yelverton. 4. Okehampton. In this instance an incomplete 
list of todaiitia no doubt.—Var. Bertramii G. Braun. *3. Hollo 
above Horrabridge, on Roborough Down, in several spots; a very 
tall oe and nearly glabrous form, Ff. A. R.—Vav. henistemon 
(2? Geney.), pseudo-hemistemon Focke. 3. Below Ha anger Down, 
near gin ie 1880, Briggs (specimen in the British Museum!). 
SUBRHAMNIFOLII. 
Except opacus and ete very ra 
R. mtidus Wh. & N. var. opacus Pooks: 3, Black Lea, Trus- 
. A. #.; Bickleigh Vale; Egg Buckland Parish, frequent. 4. 
Near 8. Tawton, Loaoed ane and Okehampton. Usually a small 
shoe ster ame shed as “f. minor” by Focke (Journ. Bot. 1890, 
Pp 
P fins Wh. & N. 3. Border of ae Down, Briggs ; 
Heathfield, tot Abbot, S. T. Dunn; Mary Tavy, urn ; 
mall a neharacteristic. Mary Ta avy to Lamerton, F.A. R. 
ri South ‘ieee by R. Taw. Henbury, Buckland Brewer, H, A. 
Evans. The only Devon localities known to me.—Var. Briggst- 
anus Rogers (“ fi. affinis W. & N.,” Fl. Plym.). 3. Locally 
abundant on the hills eo Teign Valley at Ashton, Trusham, 
Knighton Heath, North Bovey, Moreton-Hampstead, &c.; moor- 
land below Hey Tor; stow and Canonteign Downs; near 
Chagford ; near Riverhead, Bickleigh and The ra Egg Buck- 
land. 4. Sticklepath ; Belstone : ; Okeham pparently 
me most widely distributed and abundant cubehegadolinn in 
evon. 
fi. cariensis Geney. *3. Base of Tor Hill, Lydford, ae 
4. Okehampton Hill, in Ep 1908. First seen as a British 
plant at Lynton by me in 1881, this very fone ine at Siiuable 
has proved to be fairly teaqiiis = Baca gs parts o 
as in many of our western coun p to 
probably be found elsewhere along gre aun of the moo 
