"WO NEW BRITISH RUBI. 15 
' Rubus ochrodermis, n. sp.—feferences: Botanical Exchange 
Club Reports, 1889, pp. 257, 258; 1890, p. 294; 1891, p. 330.— 
often branching, ochreous, becoming dark brown-red in exposure, 
bluntly angular, striate, hairless or nearly so. Prickles many, un- 
r 
axillary part, and long ascending racemose branches below 
ternate or single, much like those of the stem but more coarsely 
8 
xternally, 
acicles and plentiful stalked glands, conspicuously grey-felted 
internally. Petals white or pinkish, narrow, il. Stamens 
LW 
ford; Wareham Wood, near Hereford. These stations all lie 
Herefordshire, and within a radius of ten miles. Wood border at 
to any variation. Queried by Dr. Focke in 1885 (in lit,), ‘‘ mucro- 
matus Blox., I think’’; but upon insufficient and too advanced 
specimens. Upon a series of specimens submitted to him in the 
autumn of 1892, he notes, ‘A rewarkable form, unknown to me. 
Other opinions upon ant can be seen at the places 
referred to above; but after watching it in the growing state for 
seven or eight seasons, I can say with some confidence that it 
cannot without violence be brought under any of the plants whose 
names have been as yet suggested for it. 
