230 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
Hieracium sylvaticum Gouan var. pellucidum Bea (H. muro- 
rum auct., var.). Sparingly in Combe Wood, near Houghto 
H., boreale Fr. I. Lodsworth. II. Wiggonholt Sub ybockasris ‘pire 
L. Selham, Salmon !—Taraxacum erythrospermum Andrz. I. Sel- 
ham. II. Wiggonholt.— 7’. palustre DC. var. udum (Jord.). 
About Slindon and Eartham; Bignor; Coates: West Stoke; West 
Wittering. II. Wiggonholt; Parham. Not confined to wet places. 
Phyteuma orbiculare L. I. Cocking. TL Amberley.—Campa- 
nula seg om L. Cocking. — Specularia hybrida A. DC. Near 
Heyshot 
erica “‘Tetraliz ae” SE: hs net 
Statice Limonium L. West Witt 
Lysimachia vulgaris L. Near Fittleworth. — L. Nummularia L. 
II. Wiggonholt. 
Blackstone pen hale Huds. Pagham; Cocking; locally plentiful 
on the chalk, Graffham.—Menyanthes trifoliata L. II. Amberley. 
Cynoglossum s metval L. I. Bury Hill. IL. Wiggonholt.— 
Myosotis collina Hoffm. I. Abundant at Kingley Vale, near West 
Stoke. II. Hurston Warren; Wiggonholt Common.—Lithospermum 
Haran L. Bury Hill; Bignor ; West Stoke—Kchium vulgare L. 
don. 
Flewlil oe a Junger. bia Wittering. 
Atropa Belladonna L. Bury Saad Lavington; Graffham; 
H: . 
Pi 
Verbascum nigrum L. I. Sindee: Odea LL Rianne 
ata arvensis Li. var. eximia Towns. II. Well-marked on 
n Warren, near Wiggonholt. — V. montana a5 elham.— 
a speeltath L. Lodsworth Common. — Euphrasia Rostkoviana 
Hayne. Lodsworth Common; Lavington.— E. nemorosa Pers. 
Pagham. 
Salvia Verbenaca L. West Wittering. — Scutellaria minor = 
Lodsworth Common.—Lamium purpureum L. var. *decipiens Sonde 
named Wittering ; scarce. Mr. Bennett considers it to be foe 
nam 
triplex hastata L. West Wittering. A. laciniata L. occurs 
euriegly here, and nd plenifll near Pagham, towards Harnley. 
ee alicornia radicans Sm. and Sueda maritima Dum. West 
ittering, 
age pulcher L. West Wittering. 
APHNE oa oLA X Merzereum, n.hybr. North Wood, pre 
n ing a special search for D. Mezerewm in t 
neighbourhood nd hein ecessfully, though I ascertained from a are 
man that the plant 5 > grows thereabouts), when I came upon & 
bush which, at some distance, greatly resembled it; being about 
8 feet high, much branched from near the base, with ascending, 
nearly straight branches. The ae (on April 21st) vers very 
young, only 4 to 1 inch long, much as in D. Mezereum at the sam 
» and similarly veined; but abiaawhak thicker and shining. 
flowers were mostly in threes, less deci rminal than in 
quite g rous and green, tho h often reddish- 
tinged externally. As D. Laureola with decid oa ous leaves is un- 
