60 ANNALS OF SCOTTISH NATURAL HISTORY 



ON THE BRITISH SPECIES OF PHORA. John H. Wood, Ent. Mo. 

 Mag., Oct. and Nov. 1910, pp. 243-249. Phora hirsiita recorded 

 from Bonhill on p. 249. 



BOTANY. 



REPORT OF THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB FOR 1909. By 

 the Editor and Distributor, S. H. Bickham, F.L.S., 1910. Several 

 Scotch plants are recorded. 



NOTES ON SCOTTISH PLANTS. By C. E. Salmon, F.L.S. (Journ. 

 Hot., 1910, pp. 205-206). A list of plants found, in Sept. 1909, by 

 A. Wallis in Westerness (97), Skye (104), and West Ross (105). 

 Chiefly from Skye, for which there are several new records, also a 

 few for Westerness. 



COCHLEARIA MiCACEA IN PEEBLESSHiRE. By M'Taggart Cowan, 

 jun. (Journ. Bot., 1910, p. 334), at 1000 feet, in a mossy spring, 

 on N.E. border. 



SPIRAEA ULMARIA, L., VAR. DENUDATA, BCENN. By G. Claridge 

 Druce (Journ. Bot., 1910, pp. 281-283). Discusses the value of 

 this as a variety. 



ROSA PIMPINELLIFOLIA, L. x RUBiGiNOSA, L. By William 

 Barclay (Journ. Bot., 1910, p. 260). Numerous clumps of this 

 rare hybrid grow along half a mile of coast near Port Seton, some 

 to a height of 8 feet. They bore a fair crop of fruit. 



A NEW VARIETY OF ROSA HIBERNICA. By William Barclay 

 (Journ. Bot., 1910, pp. 332-333). Found in Haddington, near 

 Port Seton ; referred to coriifolia x pimpinellifolia, a more or less 

 hairy form. 



ARMERIA ALPINA, WILLD., IN BRITAIN?. By H. Stuart 

 Thompson, F.L.S. (Journ. Bot., 1910, pp. 278-279). Questions 

 occurrence of true A. alpina in Britain. 



JUNCUS TENUIS, WILLD. By C. E. Salmon (Journ. Bot., 1910, 

 p. 259). Enumerates several vice-counties in Scotland. The 

 record " 98 Easterness, J. W. H. Traill, 'Ann. S.N.H.,' 1907, p. 251," 

 is erroneous, the species there recorded being J. balticus. 



RUPPIA ROSTELLATA IN v.c. 74. By C. E. Salmon (Journ. Bot., 

 1910, p. 334). Notes a specimen labelled "Stranraer, Dr. Greville" 

 (already recorded from Stranraer). 



COLLODERMA, A NEW GENUS OF MvcETOZOA. By G. Lister, 

 F.R.S. (Journ. Bot., 1910, pp. 310-312). C. oculatum (Lippert), 

 G. Lister, found by Rev. W. Cran, in Sept. 1910, on moss and 

 hepatics in two localities in Skene, Aberdeenshire. 



