500 24, ROSACES. 
and Bobartit. ‘The two varieties pass insensibly into each other, 
and intermediates often occur”; Eng. bot. 1. c. 
Vicia hybrida, Linn. 
Provinces 1-8. Somerset. Lincoln. Extinct? 
Ambiguity. Cyb.i.319. <A variety of V. lutea? 
Vicia levigata, Sm. 
Province - 2. Portland Isle, Dorset; Cullum. 
Ambiguity. Not found of late on Portland Isle. 
Vicia pannonica, Jacq. var purpurascens, DC. 
Province 1. South Devon; Mr. Briggs, E. C. report 1866. 
Casual. ‘‘ Weed in a garden, Honicknowle.” 
Ervum Monanthos, Linn. 
Province- 11. Allenheads; New Flora of Northumberland. 
Casual. Among cultivated Vicia sativa, July, 1865. 
Ervun Ervilla, Linn. 
Province 1. Somerset; Bab. man. ed. 3. 
Casual. Cyb. iii. 8336. Omitted from Man. ed. 4. 
Lathyrus latifolius, Linn. 
Provinces 123845-7--10-12131415. Partly errors? 
Alien. Cyb.i.327. In several counties, originating from gardens ; 
but simply misnomers of L. sylvestris in others. 
Lathyrus (maritimus) acutifolius, Bab. 
Province - 18. Shetland; Edmondston’s Flora. 
Syn. 311. A slight variation or starved state of the species. 
Orobus (tuberosus) tenuifolius, Roth. 
Provinces 123-5-7891011 12-1415. 
Syn. 812. Cyb. i. 828. Widely dissimilar as the extremes are, 
leading some botanists to hold this variety distinct specifically from 
the type, the one form quite gradually passes to the other by 
intermediate variations. 
24, Rosaces. 
Prunus domestica, Linn. 
Provinces 1 to 16. As recorded, with exception of province 6. 
Alien? Cyb. 1.330. Never truly wild; but whether an imported 
tree, or a gradual improvement of the wild bullace (or even sloe) 
seems an unsettled question. Professor Alphonse De Candolle 
considers the bullace and plum both as being wild species, natives 
of Caucasus and other Hastern lands; the bullace perhaps also of 
Europe. See Geogr. Bot. 878, 986. 
Spirea salicifolia, Linn. 
Provinces 1 to 17. Chiefly in Wales and Scotland. 
Alien. Cyb. i. 835. Much planted; long lasting. 
