By Thomas Bruges Mower, Esq. 



333 



smell of C. vulvaria. It is remarkable for its very numerous dark 

 brown, shining, minutely dotted, seeds, in part only enveloped by 

 the perianth. 



3. C. album, (Linn.) white Goose-foot. Engl. Bot. t. 1723. 

 St. 75, 6. C. candicans, Lam. Flor. Fr. Yol. iii., p. 248. 



Locality. Cultivated and waste places. A. Fl. July, August. 

 Area, 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. The most common of its genus. Recorded in 

 all the Districts. /3 leaves green more entire — spikes elongated — 

 more branched, 0. viride, Linn. \. lower leaves irregularly sinuate 

 serrate ; spikes combined into a lax pyramidal panicle. C. paganum 

 Reich. Vars, /3 and Y are usually larger plants, often 2 or 3 feet 

 high, much deeper green, more branched, and with the branches 

 less erect, both the above forms are not uncommon in Wilts. The 

 paganum variety is not unfrequently mistaken for Chenopodium 

 ficifolium. 



[C. murale (Linn.) This plant is mentioned in Flor. Bath, p. 

 88, as having been found on King's-down (North-west District), 

 by the late Mr. J. Jelly, but not finding any mention of it in his 

 M.S. "Flora of Bath," I fear some mistake has been made. I 

 have repeatedly sought it unsuccessfully.] 



4. C. hybridum, (Linn.) hybrid, or maple-leaved Goose-foot. 

 Engl. Bot. t. 1919. St. 75, 2. 



Locality. Garden ground and dung-hills. A. FL August. 

 Area, 1. **** 



South Division. 



1. South-east District, " Gardens in the neighbourhood of Salis- 

 bury," Mr. James Uussey. " In a field by the roadside between 

 Salisbury and Alderbury, on a rubbish heap," Mr. Reader. 



Rare in Wilts, and very uncertain in its stations. A well 

 defined species with the leaves somewhat resembling those of 

 Datura Stramonium, the panicle nearly destitute of leaves, those at 

 the base of the upper branches being very minute and strap-shaped. 

 Seeds very large. 



5. C. rubrum, (Linn.) red Goose-foot. Eng. Bot. t. 1721. 

 Locality. On heaps of manure and in rich cultivated ground 



where the soil has been recently disturbed, but uncertain in its 



