538 50*. POLEMONIACER. — 52. SOLANACER. 
50*. PoLEMONIACER. 
Collomia grandiflora, Douglas. 
Provinces 1-10. Shingle, Exmouth. Fields, Thirsk. 
Casual. Eng. bot. vi. 83. A very hardy annual or biennial from 
America, readily becoming weed-like in gardens.—(Gilia tricolor, 
another garden flower in the same order, is also mentioned in 
English Botany, vi. 83.) 
51. ConvoLVULACES. 
Cuscuta epilinum, Weihe. 
Provinces 1 to 17, interruptedly. Sown with flax seeds. 
Casual. Cyb. ii. 182. iii. 470.—(C. approximata, Bab. in Cyb. 
ii. 183. Found on a cultivated Melilot.) 
Cuscuta hassiaca, Pfeif. 
Provinces -- 34. Essex, Varenne! Herts? Cambridge. 
Casual. Cyb. iii. 364. HE. O. rep. 1867. HE. B. vi. 98. 
52. SoLANACEE. 
Hyoscyamus albus, Linn. 
Provinces- 3-11. Middlesex; Dyer. Durham; Robson. 
Casual. Cyb. ii. 184. Jour. Bot.iv.151. Surrey flo. app. 317.— 
(H. aureus has occurred on the ballast-hills of Tyne.— And 
Hi. pallidus, a variation of niger without coloured veins in the 
corolla, has been seen in Surrey, Norfolk, and Edinburgh.) 
Solanum (Dulcamara) marinum, E. B. 38. 
Provinces - 2.3---7. Likely in others also. 
Syn. 738. Unless I misunderstand the plant intended under the 
name, it seems only a trifling variation, arising from its sea-side 
localities. The words of Ray express a different view: “ Hanc 
plantam toto habitu suo et omnino specie a priore (Duleamara) 
diversam.” The description of it in English Botany, edition 
third, is more accurate than that in the Manual of British 
Botany. 
Lycium barbarum, Linn. 
Provinces - 2 3------ 10. Only where planted ? 
Alien. Cyb. ii.187. ‘Nota native, but quite naturalised on the 
south and south-east coasts”; Eng. Bot. vi. Doubtless it lives 
where planted ; but is it renewed by seed ? 
Datura Stramonium, Linn. 
Provinces 1 to11---15. Cornwall to Moray. 
Casual. Cyb. ii. 186. An escape from garden culture. 
