199 
PANICUM MILIACEUM. Linn. 
On rubbish heaps, chiefly about London, but not established. 
SETARIA ITALICA. Pal. de Beam. 
Occasionally about London, doubtless scattered with the refuse of 
birdcages, being often given to birds under the name of Italian 
millet. 
SETARIA GLAUCA. Pal. de Beanv. 
In waste places. It has occurred in Surrey, Sussex, Middlesex and 
Hants. In 1853 it was abundant on the mud dredged from the 
Thames and laid on Battersea Fields. It is liable to be passed over 
when young as S. viridis, for it is only as the fruit ripens that the 
involucral bristles assume their characteristic orange tinge, and the 
lower pale shows the transverse wrinkles which distinguish it from 
S. viridis. 
PHALARIS PARADOXA. Linn. 
In corn-fields at Swanage, Dorset, found by Mr. Hussey, but it has 
not, I believe, occurred since 1851. It has also been found near 
Huddersfield, introduced with foreign wool, but the plants in that 
locality scarcely deserve to be mentioned any more than those from 
the distillery refuse of Wandsworth and Mitcham. 
PHLEUM MICHELII. All 
Said to have been found on the summit of the highest mountains 
in Forfarsliire by G. Don, but by no one else. Mr. H. C. Watson 
suggests that possibly the long-awned form of Alopecurus alpnius, 
to which I have given the name Watsoni, may have been mistaken 
for it. 
PHLEUM ASPERITM. Jacq. 
Reported from Somerset, Gloucester (believed to be an escape from 
the Duchess of Portlands garden at Badminton), Oxford, Cam- 
bridge (confounded with P. Bohmeri), and Bedford (an error), 
but it has not been found in any of these counties recently. I 
possess specimens said to have been collected at Cobham, Kent, by 
Mr. William Maclvor in July 1846, but no one else has been able to 
find it there. 
