366 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 



Epilohium roseiim Schreb. Eoadside above Lyme. 



Fmniculmn vulgare Mill. Cliff above promenade at Lyme. 



Petasites ovatus Hill. By the Lyme near Horn Bridge. 



Artemisia Absinthium L. Hillside above Lyme, towards Char- 

 mouth. 



Jasione montana L. Between Lyme and Charmouth. 



Melissa officinalis L. By stream at Charmouth ; an escape. 



Plantago major L. var. intermedia Gilib. Cliffs east of Lyme. 



Da2)hne Laureola L. Sleech Wood, near Uplyme; apparently 

 native. 



Glyceria 2yrocumbens Dum. Sea-front at Lyme. 



Festuca rottboelloides Kunth. Lyme Cobb. 



The following plants were seen in South Devon (v.-c. 3) : — 



Glaucium flavum Crantz. On shingle near Seaton (scarce). 



Silene maritima With, and Spergularia marginata Kettel. 

 Shingle saltmarsh at mouth of Eiver Axe. 



Lathyrus sylvestris L. Cliffs at Pinhay. 



Bosa systyla Bast. Hedge at Uplyme. 



Crithmum maritimum L. Bank at mouth of Eiver Axe. 



(Enanthe iDimpinelloides L. Meadow near Uplyme Church. 



Aster Tripolium L. Saltmarsh at mouth of Eiver Axe. 



Inula squarrosa Bernh. Cliffs at Pinhay. 



Cynoglossmn officinale L. Ware Cliffs, with Iris fcetidissima. 



Verbascum Blattaria L. Abundant in small waste near Up- 

 lyme Church. 



Plantago maritima L. Saltmarsh at mouth of Eiver Axe. — 

 P. Coronopus L. A form with bracts uniformly shorter than the 

 calyx occurs under the cliffs at Seaton. 



Salicornia europcea L. f. patula Moss and S. lignosa Woods. 

 Saltmarsh at mouth of Eiver Axe ; the latter, confirmed by Dr. 

 Moss, is a new county record. 



Bttmex pulcher L. Hilly pasture near Uplyme Church. 



Calamagrostis epigeios Eoth. Under cliffs at Seaton. 



MYCOLOGICAL NOTES. 

 By W. B. Grove, M.A. 



Uromyces flectens Lagerheim. It has often been noticed 

 that the Uromyces occurring on Trifolium repens behaves differ- 

 ently in different localities, sometimes forming only teleutospores 

 from May to October, at others forming both aecidia and uredo- 

 spores as well during the same period. Lagerheim noticed that 

 the form which produces only teleutospores had larger sori, 

 remaining longer covered by the epidermis, and more predominant 

 upon the nerves and petioles, on which they cause swellings and 

 distortions. Therefore, in 1909, he published this as a distinct 

 species, U. flectens, with the characters mentioned, viz. the nature 

 of the teleutospore-sori and the absence of uredospores and aecidia. 



Plowright (Ured. p. 125) records an interesting experiment 



