Flora of Devon and Cornwall, hij I. W. N. Keys. ] 43 
between Pomplileet and Plymstock, one in a hedge-row near 
Lynham, and another by the inlet from the Yealm below Sprid- 
dlestone, where the typical form also occurs. Chudleigh : Stew, in 
Piav. — C- Near Menheniot; between St. Germans and Tideford ; 
Antony ; near Landulph : Briggs loc. cit. Truro ; Perrao ; 
Falmouth; between Helston and the Lizard: id. in Journ. Bot. 
iv. 289. Bodmin (H. S. Herb.) : Mrs. T. Grylls. Small-fiowered 
Sweet Briar. 
R.ruhiginosailu) — £'.5.991 . — Bushy places. —D- Occasionally in 
various parts of the county, but very rare about Plymouth. Among 
coppice wood on Colwell estate, and near Allowpit, Egg-buckland ; 
near Bickleigh, &c. : Briggs in Phytol. v. n.s. 369. Cornwood ; 
in a wood near Riverford, Plym valley : id. in Journ. Bot. iv. 289. 
Bickington, near Ashburton : Fl. Dev. Sidbury : Piav. Anstice 
cove : Park, in Piav. Dunsford : Parf. ib. Chudleigh, " not 
common:" Jones's Bot. Tour. — C- Ptame-headI (1862). Mount 
Edgcumbe (by the way, rather a suspicious station): Johns (auct. 
Pasc. in Bot. Gaz. ii. 39). Parish of St. Anthony and Helford 
beach, " rare :" Polytech. 1856. Sweet Briar. 
R. sepium (Thml.)— E.B.S. 2653. — C- Near Pennance mills, 
"but perhaps not truly wild:" Polytech. 1856. Small-leaved Sweet 
Briar. 
Bidford, Warwickshire, and Heyford, Oxfordshire (Bab. Man. 6th ed. 125) 
being the only well-authenticated stations for this species, we must look 
upon its occurrence in Cornwall as accidental, until confirmed by other 
observers. 
R. canina (L.)— a. R. canina (Woods). E B. 992. — Hedges and 
thickets. — D. and C- Common. It would be superfluous to 
mention habitats. Dog-Rose. Briar. 
(3. R. sarmentacea (Woods). — E.B.S. 2595. — Hedges and 
thickets. — C- Fields between Torpoint and St. John's (1864). 
Falmouth, " not uncommon :" Polytech. 1856. 
y. Pi. surculosa {W 00(h). — Hedges and thickets. — D. Buck- 
ley hill, Sidniouth : Fl. Sid. 
Y 
