116 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
of my return from Scotland at the end of July. The stations in 
districts 1, 2, 8, 4, and 6 belong to v.-c. 5, 8. Somerset; those in 
5, 8, 9, and 10 to v.-c. 6, N. Somerset. - 
My thanks are specially due to Messrs. Arthur Bennett and 
H.W. Pugsley for help with certain critical forms. An asterisk 
denotes a new vice-comital record. 
Ranunculus Drouetii Godr. 5. Ditches near Othery. 9. Fre- 
quent in the rhines about Berrow and Blean.—R. heterophyllus Fr. - 
3. Pond at W. Monkton Rectory. — R. Baudotii Godr. 9. Blean ; 
8 nkton ; scarce. — R., 
parviflorus L. 2. Coast near Williton. 5. Plentiful about Aller 
and High Ham among bushes, in wood borders, and on ty slopes. 
Glauctum flavum Orantz. 2. Shingly coast below Williton, in 
lenty. 
init claviculata Druce (Corydalis). 8. Near W. Monkton. 
Fumaria i Jord. I beli 
» W. Monkton; var. serotina Clavaud at 2. Dunster, 8. between 
Cheddon Fitzpaine and Kingston, and abundantly about W. 
Monkton. The fruit is not unfrequently subapiculate when fresh 
in this neighbourhood. I am inclined to think F. Borei a true 
native in South-west England, where it is by no means confined to 
ee 
i) 
*Barbarea intermedia Boreau. 8. Ina sown grass-field at Coombe, 
rop. 
Arabis hirsuta Scop. 9. Near Bleadon. 
Erophila pracox DC, (rachycarpa Jord.), 8. Walls at. W. 
Monkton and Bathpool. 9. Wall in the village of Bleadon.—Z 
virescens Jor 2. A nt but very dwarf on Minehead Warren, 
ing Into flower a little earlier tha precox. *9. On the 
‘green ” fronting Berrow Church, with Erodium maritimum ; a 
leaves of this species, arranged in a fiattish rosette when well 
developed, at once distinguish it from our other forms of the 
enus. : 
é Sisymbrium Thalianum J. Gay: 8. W. Monkton 
Brassica sinapioides Roth. 2. Coast near Williton and Dunster. 
iplotaxis muralis DC. 9, Uphill; Rodney Stoke, 1883, 
Lepidiwn Smithii Hooker. 2. Near E. Anstey. 8. W. Monk- 
ton.—L. Draba L. occurs sparingly on the shore between Mine- 
head and the Warren ; it will doubtless soon make good its hold 
here as elsewhere. Hesperis matronalis L. grows by the railroad 
about midway between E. Anstey and Brushwood ; probably escaped 
from a neighbouring farmhouse garden, 
