158 Flora of Devon and Cornwall, by I. W. N. Keys. 
Sedum Linn, Stonecrop. 
>S'. Telephium (L.)—E.B. 1319.— Hedge-banks, waste ground, and 
thickets. — D- Egg-buckland ; Maristow ; near Tamerton. Sal- 
combe : Fl. Sid. Near Brent : Mr. Anderson in Fl. Dev. Buck- 
land-in-tbe-Moor ; St. Marychurch : Bev. A. Neck ib. In the 
turnpike-road, near Chudleigh bridge; in a hedge near Canon- 
teign; in a lane near Crocombe bridge, leading to Hyner; in the 
road between Halshanger and Ashburton : Fl. Dev. Trentishoe ; 
valley of East Lyn : Rav. Tiverton : Mack. ib. Near Lynmouth: 
Clark in Phytol. 1852, p. 742. Between Torrington and For- 
thelsloch: Maw in Phytol. 1853, p. 792. — C- Between Antony 
passage and Trevollard, near Saltash ; Logan rock (1864). Re- 
corded in Phytol. 1844, p. 1144, by Mr. W. Curnow as growing on 
this rock. St. Teath (H. S. Herb.): Mrs. T. Grylls. Near 
Castle Treryn (Land's-end district) : J.B.T. Orpine. Live-long. 
Mr. Watson considers this species to be truly native on the South coast of 
England (vide Cyb. Brit. i. 397). Many situations, however, in which I have 
seen it are unsatisfactory, from their proximity to houses. Whether or not it 
was planted on the Logan rock, who can tell? Mr. Bentham in his Brit. FL 
(p. 168) says, "it has been so long cultivated in cottage gardens, and is so 
tenacious of life, that it is difificult to say how far it is really indigenous." 
S. album (L.) — E.B. 1578. — Rocks and walls, not common in 
Britain. — D."o." Dartmoor; Hillsborough, near llfracombe : Bav. 
I have never met with this species in either Devon or Cornwall, 
nor have any of my botanical companions or correspondents. S. an- 
glicum is sometimes mistaken for it. — C- " Found in the neigh- 
bourhood [of Falmouth] by Mr. W. P. Cocks, rare :" Polytech. 1856. 
" Perhaps truly indigenous in the Malvern hills and in Somersetshire. * * 
In other places [in Britain] where the species has been observed, it had 
probably been introduced from gardens." — Bentham'' s Brit. Fl. 
It is placed by Mr. Watson in the alien category {C7jh. Brit. i. 399). In 
his " Additional Notes " {ib. iii. 434) he says, " the Sedum of Malvern rocks 
and of walls elsewhere, recorded under the name of S. album is the S. tere- 
tifolium of Haworth, according to Mr. Borrer in Bot. Gaz. ii. 94. S. turgidum 
is perhaps the commoner form in England, and from gardens only." 
