S49 
FLORA OF THE NEIGHBOURHOOD OF ^LIVERPOOL. 
Bebbington. —Solanum dulcamara. Woodside.— Lonicera periclymenum. Wood^ 
side. —Erythrcea centaurium. Very abundant at Woodside.— E.latifolia. Bootle, 
A. Stewart, Esq. —Glaux maritima. Wallasea Pool.— Hedera helix. Birken¬ 
head Abbey walls. —Salsola kali. New Brighton.— Gentiana pneumonanthe. 
Tranmere Heath, A. Stewart, Esq. —Burnium flexuomm. Birkenhead Church¬ 
yard.— Hydrocotyle vulgaris. Ditches, Woodside. —Eryngium maritimum. 
Bootle. —Sanicula Europcea. Tranmere Wood. —Daucus carota. Woodside.— 
Z). maritimus. In a field going from Woodside to Rock Ferry.— Sium angustu 
folium and S. nodiflorum. Ponds at North Birkenhead. —(Enanthe fistulosa. 
Ponds, Woodside.— (E, pimpinelloides. Wallasea Pool. —Pimpinella saxifraga. 
Woodside and Seacombe. —Apium graveolens, Wallasea Pool.— Smyrnium 
olusatrum. Wallasea Pool.— Parnassia palustris. Very plentiful at Bootle, 
Formby, New Brighton, and Leasowe. —Statice armeria, S. limonium, and S, 
spathulata. Wallasea Pool.— Linum angustifolium. North Birkenhead, sparingly. 
— L. catharticum. Covering entire fields with its pretty white flowers, Woodside. 
^Scilla nutans. Tranmere Wood.— Juncus glaucus, J. conglomeratus^ J. 
effusus^ J. filiformis^ and J. lampocarpus. Woodside.— J. uliginosus. Bootle. 
—Luzula campestris, L.pilosa^ and L. Forsteri. Tranmere Wood. — L. sylvatica. 
Bidstone Stone-quarry. —Rumex erispus^ R.acutus and R.obtusifolius. Woodside. 
—i?. acetosa. New Brighton. — R. mansimus^ A. Stewart, Esq. —Triglochin 
maritimum. Wallasea Pool.— Alisma plantago. Woodside. —(Enothera biennis. 
Very plentiful at Formby. —Epilobium hirsutum and E. parviflorum. Woodside. 
—Chlora perfoliata. Very abundant at Woodside. —Vaccinium myrtillus. Bid- 
stone Stone-quarry. —Calluna vulgaris., Erica tetralix., and E. cinerea. Bidstone 
Stone-quarry. — Polygonum aviculare. Woodside. —Adoxa moschatellina. In 
lanes near the Wind-mill, Tranmere. —Chrysosplenium oppositifolium. Tran¬ 
mere Wood. — Silene inflata. Woodside. —Stellaria media., S. holostea, S.gra- 
minea, 2 indL S. glauca. Woodside. — Sedum acre. New Brighton.— S. reflexum. 
Tranmere, A. Stewart, Esq. There are also several species of Arenaria at New 
Brighton, and in this neighbourhood. —Cotyledon umbilicus. Near Bidstone, and 
at Poulton-cum-Seacombe.— Oxalis acetosella. Tranmere Wood. —Lychnis flos- 
cuculi and L. dioica. Woodside. —Cerastium vulgatum^ C. viscosum, and 
Spergula arvensis. In dry fields, Woodside.— Lythrum salicaria. Gilbrook.— 
Agrimonia eupatoria. Woodside. — Reseda lutea. Bootle.— Mespilus oxyacantha 
and Prunus spinosa. Hedges, Woodside.— Pyrus aucuparia. Bidstone Stone- 
quarry. — Spiraea ulmaria. Woodside.— Rosa spinosissima. New Brighton, 
covering the sand-hills; the roots run deep into the sand, and serve the same 
purpose as the maritime Grasses, in binding the sand together.— Potentilla 
anserina., P. reptans^ and P.fragariastrum. Woodside.— Tormentilla officina¬ 
lis. Bidstone Stone-quarry. I mention this locality because a friend who was 
