299 
NOTES ON SOME §5.W. SURREY ARUBI. 
By Rev. W. Moyze Rocers, F.L.S., anp Rev. E. F. Linton, M.A. 
Tues notes are the fruit of two short visits paid by each of us 
to Witley, near Godalming, in 1889 and 1890. Staying with the 
Rey. E. 8. Marshall, we had the advantage of his guidance to the 
best Rubi localities in his neighbourhood; and we are much 
indebted to him for unstinted assistance in every way, 
of th e 
remarkably rich in Rubi forms, and much yet remains to be done 
with them, as our few short expeditions, all confined to the 
immediate neighbourhood of Witley, necessarily left a good deal 
of err a ae even within that limited area. In fact, of 
the plan with, two or three will have to stand over for 
farther oe * the few records from the Se ee district of 
Woking we owe to the Rev. R. P. Murray. An a 
found prefixed to those species which we nati oe be, so far, 
unrecorded for the county 
Rubus Ideus L. Common, and plainly native. 
R. suberectus Anders. Charles Hill, Tilford. 
R. plicatus W. & N. Witley, heaths and road-sides; ae 
abundant. ‘The common plant of North Germany. Ve 
racteristic,”’ Dr. Focke. Besides this typical plant, there is a Sree 
luxuriant form by the eae side between Brook and Grayswood, 
whic some respects approaches R, sulcatus Vest., sapeeiatty 3 in 
the elongated intrp-tiowcnal panicles 
emistemon P. J. Mill. Ro val Common, Elstead, and near 
Charles Hill, Tilford. Named by Ok: igs and considered by 
him “a remarkable variety of plica A very handsome p 
hardly differing from luxuriant srs except in the leaves, Pick 
are more constantly quinate and of a yellowish green and hairy 
above, and densely softly hairy and greyish beneath, with long oval 
and very gradually acuminate leaflets, coarsely and irregularly 
dentate. ‘Though the styles are usually longer than the stamens, 
they are not invariably so, even on the same panicle. 
*R. nitidus W.& N. Mare Hill, ee and Bore) Common, 
Elstead. ‘The typical plant,” Dr. Focke. Luxuriant much- 
branched bushes with small bright pink i i numerous strongly- 
hooked prickles on panicle, and equally numerous but usually 
Re ‘ghia P. J. M ull.), aa still more from another form, 
brambles of the neighbourhood. This last has large flowers, 
crowded at first, but ultimately lengthened into a branching md 
panicle, ee as in R. integribasis) is but slightly armed with 
falcate or declining prickles. a: are (unlike those of the typical 
plant) are of a a dull opaque gree 
