542 54. OROBANCHACER. 
This reverts to the typical form under culture; and in the wild 
state they are connected by intermediate forms. 
Linaria supina, Desf. 
Provinces 12-11. Cornwall. Devon. Dorset. Durham. 
Alien. Oyb. ii. 221. Probably not native; DC. geogr. bot. rais. 
Linaria spartea, Hoffmansegg ? 
Province -- 3. Recent inclosures by Walton Station, Surrey. 
Casual. Cyb. ii. 221. Seen in quantity in 1848—5 ; less plenti- 
ful afterwards; extinct before 1860.—~— (The African Linaria 
bipartita is occasionally found in Surrey, in places where game has 
been fed on imported seeds.—And L. triphylla has occurred in a 
newly made road near Birkenhead, Cheshire.) 
Mimulus luteus, Linn. 
Provinces 123-5 6--910111213 1415 16. 
Alien. Cyb. ii. 224. iii. 474. Established in Scotland._(The 
M. guttatus has been reported in Scotland also, by Dr. Arnott in 
the British Flora.) 
Mimulus moschatus, Douglas. 
Provinces- 3 7. Surrey; Dr.Trimen. N. Wales; Mr. Pamplin. 
Alien. Journal of Botany, iv. 151. Increases rapidly in damp 
loose ground, and likely may become established as a naturalised 
plant in Britain. 
Erinus alpinus, Lion. 
Province - 10. Near Tanfield, York; Bab. man. ed. 6. 
Alien. ‘In abundance on the old bed of the river.” 
54. OROBANCHACER, 
Orobanche lucorum, Koch. 0. elatior, fide Borrer. 
Province -- 3. Corn-field near Epsom, Surrey, in 1846. 
Terror of name. Cyb. il. 226. i. 475. Eng. bot. vi. 197. 
Orobanche (minor) amethystea, Thuil. 
Provinces 1 ? 8. East Cornwall. South Devon. Kent. 
Syn. 793. Cyb. ii. 228. iii. 475. Sussex? “TIT much doubt the 
correctness of the name”; Mr. Borrer, 1859. But the name is 
adhered to in Bab. Man. ed. 6, and in Eng. Bot. ed. 3. 
Orobanche ramosa, Linn. 
Provinces 1234. On Hemp, and thus very uncertain. 
Casual. Cyb. ii, 281.—(O. speciosa, DC., was found in 1860 by 
the late Thomas Clarke in a garden at Bridgewater, parasitical in 
a, row of pease.) 
