THE FLORA OF WARWICKSHIRE. 
113 
I. Roadsides near Oscott College ; Sutton Park ; Middleton Heatli; 
Coleshill Heatli; near Bannersley Pool; Baddesley Heath ; 
stone quarries, Hartshill; Bradnock’s Marsh. 
II. Kenilworth Heath, Herb. Ferry; heathy footways near Brinklow. 
[P. arenaria. P.S.—Occurs as a garden weed at Milverton, H.B. 
A native of Hungary.] 
LITTORELLA. 
L. lacustris, Linn. Plantain Shore-weed. 
Native : In and about pools. Very rare. July, August. 
I. Coleshill Pool! Aylesford, B.G., 636; Olton Reservoir, abundant, 
1881; Earl’s Wood Reservoir. 
[Blitum capitulum, IF. Warwick Castle Park, Herb. Perry.] 
[Blitum virgatum, IF. Garden weed, Stratford-on-Avon, Cheshire, 
Herb. Perry.] 
[_Amaranthus retroflexus, Linn,. Near Stratford-on-Avon, IF. C.; 
skin-yards, Kenilworth and Milverton, H. B., Herb. Perry.] 
[A. Blitum, IF. New Town, Coventry, Kirk, Herb. Perry.] 
[A. dejlexus. Waste ground, Kenilworth, J. B. Syme, Herb. Bab.] 
All these are mere casual weeds of uncertain occurrence. 
CHENOPODIACEvE. 
CHENOPODIUM. 
C. polyspermum, Linn. Many-seeded Goosefoot. 
Colonist: In cultivated ground and corn fields. Rare. July to 
August, or later. 
II. Alcester; Kinwarton ; Oversley, Part, iii., 24; Great Alne, Herb. 
Perry; Saltisford, near Warwick, Per. FI.; as a garden weed 
at Myton ; Wliitn ash ; Milverton; Budbrook; Berkswell, H.B.; 
near Brown’s Over Hall, B. S. R., 1868; in cornfields, Ipsley ! 
Slatter; Drayton, near Stratford-on-Avon. 
All our plants are the variety C. acutifolium. 
C. album, Linn. White Goosefoot. 
Native: In cultivated ground and on roadsides. Common as an 
aggregate species. July to October. 
a. candicans. 
I. Railway banks, Sutton Park; Hartshill; Miuwortli, Temple Balsall. 
II. Offchurcli! Harbury; Tachbrook; Budbrook, II.B.; Stratford-on- 
Avon. 
b. viride. 
I. Railway banks, Sutton Park; Middleton; Coleshill; Maxtoke ; 
Cornels End; Hampton-in-Arden. 
II. Warwick, Y. and B.; Honington; Alveston Heath: Drayton; 
Berkswell; near Rugby. 
c. paganum. 
I. Railway banks, Sutton Park; Boldmir, near Sutton; Hartshill; 
Temple Balsall, &c. 
II. Rare; in gardens and waste places about Milverton, Myton, War¬ 
wick, H. B.; cornfields, Berkswell, &c. 
These plants have not been sufficiently discriminated to allow of a 
full account of their distribution. 
[C. murale , Linn., has been recorded in the new Botanist’s Guide 
on the authority of the Rev. W. T. Bree. I have no knowledge 
of this as a Warwickshire plant.] 
