206 
THE FLORA OF WARWICKSHIRE. 
one other Warwickshire locality ; and Ohara vulgaris , a very 
peculiar form, from near Stockton. 
I may here add a few notes of my own from various localities. 
.The trailing St. John’s Wort ( Hypericum humifusum), I find in 
abundance in Arnold s Wood, near Earlswood, and in a sand quarry 
at Comet s End ; and in this quarry I also find that very minute 
plant, the All-seed Flax ( Radiola linoides ), and, somewhat sparingly, 
Gnaphalium sylvaticum . The beautiful Golden Eod ( Solidago 
Virgaurea , and the Saw-wort (Serratula tinetoria), are both abundant 
in the lanes about Earlswood and Waring’s Green; the Cow-wheat 
(Melampyrmn pratense ) in Arnold’s Wood, near Earlswood ; and on 
the shores of Earlswood Reservoir there is now an abundance of 
the laie Limosella aguatica, Ghenopodium polyspermum var. acuti- 
. folium , A astuitiuni palustre (the Marsh Tellow Cress), the very 
minute sedge, Eleocharis acicularis , and Littorella lacustris. 
J. E. Bagnall. 
NOTES ON THE “FLORA OF WARWICKSHIRE.” 
BY J. E. BAGNALL, A.L.S. 
(Continued from page 164.) 
Aretium minus, Schk. 
(4.) Lightkorne, 1852, Miss Palmer. 
Carduus nutans, Linn. 
(1.) Lane below Wiskaw Ckurch. 
(4.) Pastures between Rugby and Lawford 1 Baxter , MS. 
C. erispus, Linn. 
(1.) Near Dosthill. 
(4.) Near Hill Morton, and near Lawford Mill, Baxter MS. ; Milverton ; 
Blacklow Hill, Warwick, Bromioich. 
C. eriophorus, Hoffm. 
(4.) Wliitnash pastures, abundant; Ashorne, Bromwich. 
(9.) Moorland by Bannum’s Wood, near Morton Bagot. 
C. pratensis, wnid. 
(6.) Lanes near Honiley, abundant in 1850 ; in a meadow near Wroxall 
Tollgate, Bromioich. 
C. aeaulis, Hoffm. 
(5.) Near Frankton, type and caulescent form. 
(7.) Near Brailes. 
(8.) Field near Claverdon. 
(9.) Moorland by Bannum’s Wood, near Morton Bagot. 
C. setosus (Bess.). In an allotment garden, Milverton, Bromwich. 
September, 1893. 
