\ 
174 DEVONIAN STATIONS OF PLANTS NOTED IN THE LAST CENTURY. 
from Cholwick Town to Cadover Bridge, on Tolchmore, just after 
you pass the first brook.” [Smith considers the Agrostis rubra 
Huds. to be Gastridium lendigerum Gaud.; but the Tolchmore plant 
is not at all likely to have been this species. If the following note 
really belongs to Ayrostis canina, and not to A. canina y. Hudson, 
the Agrostis setacea Curt., I should think it to have been this last, 
which is an abundant grass on and about Dartmoor] . — A. canina. 
All over Halldown. [True A. canina is stated to be common at the 
resent time on Haldon by the Rev. W. Moyle Rogers in his ‘ Con- 
A. alba b. stolonifera. On the rocks at the end of the warren, 
towards Dawlish, and beyond the hole in the rocks, Exmouth. 
Aira caerulea. Molinia caerulea Moench. On Tolehmore. — A. 
flexuosa b. montana. On Wigvor Down, twixt the gully and the 
gate leading to Greenyil Farm. [This station belongs to Dist. IV. 
of ‘ Flora of Plymouth]. 
estuca decumbens.  Triodia decumbens L On Tolchmore. 
mouth]. 
Poa loliacea. Sclerochloa loliacea Woods. On the wall under 
the wood at Nutwell. 
a Briza media. In the meadow at Limpston leased to Agnes 
ipper. 
Festuca bromoides. F. sciuroides Roth. By the side of the road 
on the left hand as you get up on Haldown from Exeter; the 
northernmost road. — F’. ovina. On Dartmore and Tolchmore. é 
gilops incurva. — Lepturus filiformis Trin. On the wall twixt 
the moat and the sea-wall at Nutwell. 
Nardus stricta. In great plenty about Cock’s Torr, Dartmore. 
Lrichomanes tunbrigense. Hymenophyllum tunbrigense Sm. Under 
the rocks on Cock’s Torr, on the west side, at spring-head. 
Asplenium Ruta-muraria. On the bridge just before you come 
burton ; on the walls at Buckland House. — A. marinum. On 
rocks twixt the lane and the sea as you go from East Budley 
towards the beach, near an oak. : 
_ Polypodium Phegopteris. On the side of the hedge on the left 
of the road twixt Wilsworthy Hamlet and Black Down Gate, just 
beyond a lane that turns to the left hand. [Quite a local plant 
about and on Dartmoor]. 
Lycopodium inundatum. On the bog nearest to Yeatintor, on 
Woodbury Common. [A very rare plant in Devon, seen on Wood- 
bury at least so recently as 1868 (vide Keys’s ‘ Flora of Devon and 
— Cornwall’)]. — L. Selago. On the bog nearest to Budley 
altern. 
In addition to the above, twenty-one species of Lichens, Fuci, 
&c., haye one or more stations given for them in M 
