737 SOLANUM NIGEUM. 



285 



52 Anglesea. Eobinson cat. 



54 Lino, north. Fowler rec.t 



55 Leicester. Howitt ms. 



56 Notts. 



57 Derby. Howitt cat. 



58 Chester ! J. L. "Warren cat. 



59 Lane. s. ! F. M. Webb cat. 



60 west. Syme sp. 



61 York s. east. 



62 n. east. " colonist." 



63 s. west. 



64 m. west. 



65 n. west. " colonist." 



66 Durham. " colonist." 



67 Northumb. " ballast hiUs." 



68 Cheviotland. " colonist." 

 74 Wigton. Balfour sp. 



(75 80 81 83 85 98 100 ; 

 introduced). 



738 Solanum Dulcamara. 



Counties all, with many excep- 

 tions northwards ; namely, 

 42 43 74 78 79 84 (91 to 

 94) 97 98 99 101 103 104 

 105 107 to 112. Professor 

 Dickie holds it an intro- 

 duced plant in counties 91 to 

 94. Treated as a native in 

 the Flora of Moray ; and 

 equally so in, the Floras of 

 Clyde and Forth. 



738b Solanum miniatum. 



15 Kent east. (F. M. Webb). 

 739 Atropa Belladonna. 



7 Wilts north. Flower rec. 



11 Hants south. Bromf. ms. 



12 north. 



13 Sussex west. 



15 Kent e. G. E. Smith cat. 



16 west. Pamplin ms. 



17 Surrey. Brewer sp. 



20 Herts. Coleman, sp. 



21 Middlesex. Kingsley sp. 



22 Berks. 



23 Oxford. Christy ms. 



24 Bucks. Hurst ms. 



26 Suffolk west. Bunbury sp. 



29 Cambridge. Babington cat. 



30 Bedford. 



32 Northton. Ch. Bab. ms. 



33 Gloster east. Lees sp. 



34 west. 



35 Monmouth. Varenne ms. 



36 Hereford, "native"; Bab. 



37 Worcester. (E. Lees). 



47 Montgomery. (J. E. Vize). 



60 Lane. west. Fielding ms. 



61 York s. east. Parsons rec. 



62 n. east. " native." 



63 s. west. 



64 m. west. Baines sp. 



65 n. west. Ward sp. ' 



66 Durham. " denizen." 



67 Northumb. " denizen." 



68 Cheviotland. " denizen." 



69 Westmor. Simpson sp. 



(2 3456789 [10] 18 

 19 27 28 37 38 39 40 41 

 45 50 51 55 56 57 70 72 

 75 76 77 81 83 85 86 87 

 90 95 [98] 103; iU vouched 

 in these counties, or re- 

 ported there as an uncertain 

 native) . This plant possibly 

 may be indigenous in some 

 of the chalk or limestone 

 districts. The roots are 

 long -lasting, and the seedling 

 plants spring up freely in 

 gardens ; peculiarities which 

 tend to establish the plant 

 in localities to which it may 

 have been originally carried 

 by human hands. The lo- 

 calities on record for it af- 

 ford not a few instances 



