96 FLOBA OF JEnSFA'. 



2. M. arvenais Wallr. 



A rare casual. Waste ground, St. Helier's (1901). 



3. M. alba Desr. 



Casual. Near Don Bridge. /. Piquet. Bel Boyal (1896). 

 In a field of lucerne at Grouville (1901). 



4. M. parviflora Desf. {M. indica All.) 



Casual; the commonest of the four species. More or less 

 naturalised on the sandy ground about Pontac and La Rocque . 



8. Teifolium L. 



1. t. sdbteeranedm l. 



Native. Dry, sandy banks and fields. Common. April to 



Jmie. 



Guernsey. Alderney. Sark. France. 



2. T. PEATBNSE L. 



Native and planted. Pastures and roadsides. Common. 



May to August. 



Guernsey. Alderney. Sark. France. 



3. T. MAKITIMUM Huds. (T. SQUAMOSUM L.) 



Native ? Fields and waste places near the sea. Very rare. 

 jNIay, June. 



Waste ground at First Tower (1898). St. Ouen's Bay, /. 

 Piqtiet. 1898. Bellozanne Valley (1899). 

 Guernsey (locally common). Rare in Normandy and Brittany ; 

 common further south. S. and W. Europe. 



Probably a survi^'al of the salt marshes on the south coast, 

 now drained and cultivated. 



4. T. incarnatum L. 



Much sown for fodder, occasionally straying into hedges and 

 roadsides. 



5. T. MoLiNEEii Bab. 



Native ? Dry, rocky places. Very rare. June. 



On Janvrin's tomb, an islet in Portelet Bay, accessible only 

 at low water. 



In cultivated fields of T. incaenatum L. may occasionally 

 be found plants with white or straw-coloured ilowers (T. 

 STEAMINEUM Presl. according to Druce, " Flora of Berkshu-e "). 

 This form needs to be distinguished from T. Molineeii, which 

 appears to be the wild form of T. incaenatum, and has 

 j(or;»»/?// white or very pale rose flowers. The pubescence of 



