176 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
). Quarry, Okeha —R. rosaceus W ar. hystrix 
(Wh ). Okehampton; § to r cundus 
Rogers. (C). Newquay and Bodmin Road.—R. plinthostylus Genev 
Quite common, » aS a rule, easily recognizable, thou 
varying considerably in stoutness and in the character of the 
armature, according to situation. It seems to be far the most 
generally distributed of the Cornish glandular brambles, al- 
though as yet unknown elsewhere in Britain, except in one 
locality in Dorset and one in West Gloucester. Usually con- 
spicuous by its leafy lax panicle of rather small pinkish star-like 
flowers, and its handsome deeply incised leaflets narrowed at 
—f. hirtus Waldst. & Kit. vay. rotundifolius Bab. (D). Oke- 
hampton ; Sticklepath; §. Tawton. Locally abundant and 
identical with the plant so common in the Tei n Valley.—R. cory- 
lfolius Sm ite uncommon. (a) sublustris (Lees). (C). Quin- 
treil Downs. (b) cyclophyllus (Lindeb.). (C). Coswarth Downs ; 
Goonhavern.—R. cesius Linn. (C). Common a 
flowers, and otherwise making some app 
fourtanus, if it is not actually an abnormal state or form of that 
species. 
Alchemilla vulgaris Linn. vay. pratensis Pohl. 
moor, Belstone. — Poteriwm Sanguisorba Linn. (C). Ne quay ; 
Perran porth. — P. officinale A. Gray. D, Okehampton. — Rosa 
micrantha Sm. (C). Goonhavern; Perran rth.— R. canina Linn 
C). The varieties lutetiana and dumalis only moderately frequent 
and none others observed. — R, systyla Bast. (D). §. Tawton. 
Not seen in (C), and as yet_known only in the eastern vice- 
county.—f. arvensis Huds. ©). The most common rose. (D), 
Frequent. 
Epilobrum lanceolatum Seb. & Maur. (D). Hill above Oke- 
hampton Railway Station.— Feniculum vulgare Mill. (C). New- 
