142 
HISTORY OF THE COUNTY BOTANY OF WORCESTER. June, 1892. 
P. zosteraefolius. 46. 
P. obtusifolius. 46. 
P. flabellatus. 46. 
P. densus. 46. 
Actinocarpus Damasonium. 46. 
Orchis incarnata. 47. 
I Epipogium aphyllum. 68. (Hereford.) 
J Crocus sativus. 68. Not native. 
X Narcissus lobularis. 68. Not native. 
Asparagus officinalis. 68. 
Polygonatum multiflorum. 69. 
X Lilium pyrenaicum. 69. 
Juncus Gerardi. 70. 
Carex elongata. 93. 
C. digitata. 93. 
C. montana. 93. 
X Setaria viridis. 94. Not native to Worcester. 
X S. glauca. 94. Not native. 
Apera Spica-venti. 94. 
Agrostis vulgaris. 94. First record of type. 
Avena elatior var. bulbosus. 95. 
Glyceria plicata. 
G. pedicillata. 
Festuca uniglumis. 
Serrafalcus mollis. (Type.) 
J Lolium italicum. Not native. 
Polypodium calcareum. 
Lycopodium alpinum. 
Chara fragilis. 
Mr. Lees’s “ Botany of Worcestershire” has some draw¬ 
backs. It has four separate sets of pages. The pages relating 
to each botanical district are not headed. There is no index. 
Many of the species are unlocalised. The species in the text 
and table do not always tally. It presents us, nevertheless, 
with one hundred and thirteen additional records, of which 
forty-three are not native to the county, and others are 
varieties of which the types have been previously catalogued, 
or vice versa. 
The third edition of the “ Botany of the Malvern Hills,” 
bears at the foot of the preface the date July 31st, 1868. I 
make the following notes upon it:— 
Alsine tenuifolia. Not recorded, although it is noted in 1st and 
2nd editions. 
