4S2 



ISLAND LIFE. 



[part II. 



meantime have acted as a fresh centre of dispersal ; and thus 

 a plant might pass on step by step, by means of stations 

 temporarily occupied, till it reached a district where, the 



" Close by Ditton Station three species appeared which may be called 

 interlopers. The biennial Bafharea precox, one of these, is the least 

 remarkable, because it might have come as seed in the earth from some 

 garden, or possibly in the Thames gravel (used as ballast). At first it 

 increased to several plants, then became less numerous, and will soon, in 

 all probability, bscotne extinct, crowded out by other plants. The biennial 

 Fetroselinum segetum was at first one very luxuriant plant on the slope of 

 the embankment. It increased by seed into a dozen or a score, and is now 

 nearly if not quite extinct. The third species is Linaria purpurea^ not 

 strictly a British plant, but one established in some places on old walls. 

 A single root of it appeared on the chalk facing of the embankment by 

 Ditton Station. It has remained there several years and grown into a 

 vigorous specimen. Two or three suialler examples are now seen by it, 

 doubiless sprung from some of the hundreds or thousands of seeds shed 

 by the original one plant. The species is not included in Salmon and 

 Brewer's Flora of Surrey. 



''The main line of the railway has introduced into Ditton parish the 

 perennial Arabis hirsuta, likely to become a permanent inhabitant. The 

 fcpscies is found on the chalk and greensand miles away from Thames 

 Ditton ; but neither in this parish nor in any adjacent parish, so far as 

 known to myself or to the authors of the flora of the county, does it 

 occur. Some years after the railway was made a single root of this 

 Arahis was observed in the brickwork of an arch by which the railway is 

 carried over a public road. A year or two afterwards there were three or 

 four plants. In some later year I laid some of the ripened seed-pods 

 between the bricks in places where the mortar had partly crumbled out. 

 Now there are several scores of specimens in the brickwork of the arch. 

 It is presumable that the first seed may have been brought from Guildford. 

 But how could it get on to the perpendicular face of the brickwork? 



''The Bee Orchis (Ophrys apifera), plentiful on some of the chalk lands 

 in Surrey, is not a species of Thames Ditton, or (as I presume) of any 

 adjacent parish. Thus, I was greatly surprised some years back to see 

 about a hundred examples of it in flower in one clayey field either on the 

 outskirts of Thames Ditton or just within the limits of the adjoining 

 parish of Cobham. I had crossed this same field in a former year without 

 observing the Ophrys there. And on finding it in the one field I closely 

 searched the surrounding fields and copses, without finding it anywhere 

 else. Gradually the plants became fewer and fewer in that one field, 

 and some six or eight years after its first discovery there the species had 

 quite disappeared again. I guessed it had been introduced with chalk, 

 but could obtain no evidence to show this." 



4. Mr. A. Bennett, of Croydon, has kindly furnished me with some 

 information on the temporary vegetation of the banks and cuttings on the 



