EEPORT OF THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB. 379 



forwarded as large a supply of this plant as I could get this year, but 

 have not been able to get roots, as it grows some distance from the 

 margin of the pool in which I tind it. It is fairly abundant in one 

 spot in Sutton Park, but does not occur elsewhere to my knowledge. 

 Car ex paniculata is abundant at Sutton, but teretiuscula does not 

 occur anywhere in JN'orth AVarwick. How this variety of tere- 

 tiuscula (if it is a variety of that plant) got here seems very puzzling." 

 — J. Bagnall. 



Car ex axillaris, (}oo^ '' Solehill, Warwickshire. Of this I have 

 only sent a few plants, just to register its occurrence in a new locality 

 in Warwickshire, the old locality having unfortunately been destroyed. 

 It was very abundant, and grew intermixed with Carex remota and 

 Carex vulpina^ — J. Bagnall, July, 1873. 



Carex stricta. *' Marshes, Portmore, Co. Antrim." — S. A. Stewart, 

 April 20, 1872. "A curious form with elongate fruits much ex- 

 ceeding the length of the nut. It seems to be to ordinary C. stricta 

 very much what C. Gibsoni is to ordinary C. vulgaris.^'' — J. T. Boswell, 

 1875. 



Carex Wafsoni, Syme. ''Bog at Ferniegair, near Hamilton, 

 Lanarkshire ; and Clyde, four miles east of Glasgow." — Eichaed 

 McKAr, June, 1872. 



Carex punctata. " IS'ear St. Austel, Cornwall." — J. Ctjnnack, 

 July, 1872. " These are the most typical specimens of C. punctata 

 which I have seen from Britain. M. Bailey's Tenby specimens are 

 similar to the South of Ireland and Kircudbrightshire examples." — 

 John T. Boswell, 1875. "The station for this species at Tenby 

 is on ledges of perpendicular rocks in a small bay called the 

 Waterwinch. to the north of Tenby (as stated in the ' Journal 

 of Botany'). Mr. Joseph Sidebotham, of Manchester, informs 

 me he has found this species higher up the same stream, which 

 discharges itself in the Waterwinch ; also in another small bay a mile 

 distant from Waterwinch. I have also a suspicion that the plant 

 occurs in the neighbourhood of Lydstep in the opposite direction." — 

 Chaules Bailey. 



Carex fulva, Grood. ''Bog, Viverdin Down, East Cornwall. I^ot 

 recorded for its county in ' Comp. Cyb. Brit.,' and only doubtfully 

 for Devon. Thus this station considerably extends its area." — T. E. 

 Archee Bbiggs, 1872. 



Carex involuta. " Mainly sent because this new station extends the 

 range of this local Carex some eight miles south (with a touch of west) 

 from Hale Moss. I am told that the sedge grows rather finer than in 

 the original station." — J. L. Waeren. " I hope I am right in assigning 

 this note of Mr. Warren's to C. involuta, but it had no name written 

 at the top of the paper. It is earnestly requested that any 

 member sending any note about a plant, will begin it with the 

 name of the plant and the locality where it was found." — John T. 

 Boswell. 



Agrostis setacea, Curtis. " A few specimens collected from con- 

 siderably over 1000 ft. on Dartmoor." — T. E. Archee Briggs. 



Bromus arvensis. " Tweedside, Kelso, Eoxburghshire, 1874. This 

 was gathered partly in June and partly in September. In September 

 the spikelets are much larger (owing, I think, to the wet weather). 



