4i 
V. sepium (L.). Fig. 166. Bush Vetch. Native. P. VI-IX. 
Woods and shady banks. Frequent. 
C. Landican ; Bank at Bromborough Station. 
V. lutea ( L .). 
1862, on the bank of River Dee, near West Kirby (Miss c. G.). 
It was washed away in 1863, and has not been seen since. 
V. sativa (L.). Cultivated Vetch. Alien. VI-IX. 
Among corn, and about the borders of fields, but it has no 
claim to be considered indigenous. 
V. angustifolia (Roth.). Fig. 167. Narrow-leaved Vetch. Native. 
A. VI-VIII. 
a. segetalis (Thuill.). 
By roadsides, among corn, &c. Common. 
C. With white flowers, every year on the roadside on the hill 
above Burton (Dr. g.). 
b. Bobartii (Forster). Fig. 168. 
Sandhills and dry sandy pastures. Frequent. 
V. lathyroides (L.). Fig. 169. Spring Vetch, t Native. A. V-VII. 
The sandhills. Frequent. Rare elsewhere. 
C. Slope of Grange Hill, by the Hill Houses, West Kirby 
(r.b.). Denhall (Dr. g.). 
V. villosa. 
L. As a casual at Aintree (j.a.w.). 
Lathyrus (L.). Vetchling. 
L. Aphaca (L.). Casual. A. V-VIII. 
Very rare. 
L. 1852, a single plant on Seaforth Common (h.s.f.). 1864, 
Cornfield at Crosby (Miss r.). 1901, Aintree, almost annually 
(j.a.w.). 
L. pratensis (L.). Fig. 170. Meadow Vetchling. Native. 
P. VII, VIII. 
Meadows and hedges. Common. 
L. latifolius (L.). Broad-leaved Everlasting Pea. Alien. P. VII, 
VIII. 
L. Opposite the Marine Terrace, Waterloo (r.b.). 
L. sylvestris (L.). Fig. 171. Narrow-leaved Everlasting Pea. 
Casual. P. VII, VIII. 
Bushy and sandy places. Very rare. 
