GEAMINEiE. 



233 



which in this country grows only noar the sea or in 

 marshes washed by tidal rivers. Unliappily, our 

 interest in the question whether P. littoralis truly 

 belongs to the aboriginal Bristol Flora is overborne 

 by the certainty that in a little while it will exist 

 only in our herbaria. 



GASTRIDIUM, ral. dc Beauv. 



884. G. lendigerum, Gaud. 



Native; scattered over a very small ai'oa on the 

 Gloucestershire bank of the Avon, below Bristol. 

 There is little doubt that all the published records 

 of the occurrence of this grass on St. Vincent's 

 Rooks, Durdham Down, and the bank of Avon, 

 may be referred to the same small tract of lime- 

 stone upon which it now grows ; although its ox- 

 tent is less than it was formerly. Mr. T. B. Flower 

 tells us that ho used to find it behind the Now 

 Hotwell House, long since removed. That spot is 

 situate on the river-bank, some distance from the 

 present station for the plant. Vll. Vlll. 



HOLCUS, Linn. 



885. H. lanatus, L. 



Native ; in meadows, pastures, hedge-banks, and 

 waste places. Very common and universally dis- 

 tributed. VI. VII. 



886. H. mollis, L. 



Native ; in woods, hedge-banks, and pastui'os, voi'y 

 much less common than the preceding species. 



VI. VII. 



