14 FLORA OF CAMBRIDGESHIRE. 



ton. Harston; Toft; Bourn; K Barton; W. H. 0. — 



4. Dry Drayton. Chesterton. — 5. Biggin Abbey; S. W. W. 

 Newmarket; K — 7. Doddington. — 8. By the Canal be- 

 tween F.lm and "Wisbech. North Brink, Wisbech ; A. P. 



FUMARIAGEjE. 

 Fumakia Linn. 



?l. F. capreolata Linn. 



F. major scandens flore pallidiore, B. C. App. ii. 7. E. 

 Cat. Angl. ed. 1. 122. M. M. 37. F. capreolata, M. PL 16. 

 Eelh. 286. 



Cultivated ground, rare. A. June to September. 



There is much doubt about this plant as a native of 

 Cambridgeshire. All that has been so named may probably 

 be the rampant form of F. officinalis; or those found at Elm 

 and near Wisbech and near Beche, may have been one or 

 more of the species usually confounded under the name of 

 F. capreolata. 



1. Corn-field by the Gogmagog Hills; W. H. C. He 

 now thinks that it was only F. officinalis. On the borders 

 of the Gogmagog Sills towards Hinton ; Kay. — 3. Wimpole; 



5. W. W. Gamlingay ; J. M. — 5. One of the forms was 

 seen near Beche Lode in 1841; E". — 8. Near Oxborough 

 Hall, Elm. Banks of the canal near Elm ; J. B. 



+2. P. oflB.cin.alis Linn. Common Fumitory. 



Fumaria, B. C. 57. F. officinarum, M. M. 37. F. offici- 

 nalis, M. PL 16. Eelh. 286. 



Fields and waste places, common. A. May to September. 



Probably common in all the districts, although I have 

 few stations recorded in the Fens. 



% 3. P. micra'ntha Lag. 



Fields, rare. A. June to September. 



