Page:Journal of botany, British and foreign, Volume 9 (1871).djvu/384

 356 ON THE BOTANY OF THE LIZABD PENINSULA.

Clematis Vitalba. Peiigerrick woods.

ThaUctrnm Jlacmn. Not seen.

Anemone nemorom. Noted only in the granite tract west of Penryn.

Ranunculus afpiatilis. Not seen.

R. Jiederaceus. Prequent in ditclies and streamlets. R. Lenormandi and R. triparlitus looked for without success.

R. Flammula. Frequent, with var. pseudo-reptans.

R. Lingua. Sparingly among reeds at the mouth of the stream at Gnnwallo.

R. acris. Common.

R. repens. Common.

R. bulhosus. Not seen.

R. hirsutus. Frequent by roadsides and about houses.

R. sceleratiis and arvensis. Not seen.

Caltha paliistris. Not seen.

Aquilegia vulgaris. Hedgebanks in the Devonian tract about Manaccan and Durgan, looking indigenous.

Paparer hjhridum. Once seen in a cornfield near Mullion.

P. Rlioeas. Everywhere common ; var. strigosum, by side of a road at St. Euan.

P. duhium. Never seen.

Chelidonimn majiis. Hedgebank in Helford village.

Glaucium luteum. Sandy shore of the Helford Creek at Durgan.

Fumaria pallidijlora. Once seen by the side of the road going out of Cadgwith to Poltesco.

F. confusa. Frequent in corn and turnip-fields.

F. officinalis. Common.

Coronopus didgm.a. Everywhere one of the commonest weeds about farmhouses and villages.

C. Ruellii. In similar places to the last but much less frequent.

Lepidium Smithii. Everywhere frequent, on the earthy banks, by the sides of the roads, and between the fields.

L. campestre. Not seen.

Cochlearia officinalis. In several places among the sea eliifs.

C. danica. By the shore at Gunwallo and Helford.

Draha verna. Wall tops.

Koniga maritima. Earth-bank at Lizard town near a garden.

Cardamine pratensis. Not common.

C. Jiirsuta. Roadsides, unfrequent.

C. sylvatica. Wallside at Falmouth.

Barbarea vulgaris. Unfrequent.

B. pr(jecox. Roadsides near villages Helford, Ruan-Minor, etc.

Nasturtium officinale. Common in ponds and ditches. Var. sii/olium, in the low part of the Caerthilian streamlet.

N. terrestre and N. sylvestre. Neither seen.

Sisymbrium, officinale. Common.

JErysimum Alliaria. Not seen.

Cheiranthus Cheiri. Casual on walls at Penryn, etc.

Brassica Rapa. Frequent in cultivated fields.

B. oleracea. All through the western half of Cornwall they have a plan in the cornfields of gathering the refuse together in heaps three or four yards in diameter, and planting upon these a crop of Cabbages, and

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