164 ADDENDA. 



rather than foliage-leaves ; owing to the elongation of the 

 axis, their number is at the same time greatly increased. Such 

 are the wheat-ear carnation, the Cornish and cross-leaved 

 heaths (E. vagans and E. Tetralix), the Madonna lily (L. can- 

 didum), and the snowdrop (Galanthus nivalis)." Plant Tera- 

 tology, lL,p. 124. 



"Plantago lanceolata, Linn. var. anthoviride, Watson. Provi- 

 sional name. Journ. Bot., 1921 , p. 355. 



5. Many plants on roadside, with type, between Quintrell and 

 Cosworth Downs, 1922, Rilstone and Thurston. "The 

 stamens remain erect or almost so, and do not become 

 as squarrose as in the type ; the filaments are greenish yellow 

 and longly-elliptical instead of whitish and oblong-spheroidal 

 as in the type." W. Watson in lit. 



Amaranthus Blitum, Linn. 



3. Par Harbour, 1922, Medlin. 



"Helleborins violacea, Dmce. 



1. Morwenstow, 1922, Miss James. Previously recorded for 

 Devon. 



"Phalaris bulbOSa, Linn. Alien, S. Europe. 

 3. Par Harbour, 1922, Medlin. 



A paper by Dr. H. G. Guppy, F.R.S., on Atlantic Drift on 

 Cornish Beaches, was read at a meeting of the Royal Institu- 

 tion of Cornwall in October, 1922, and will be published in the 

 Journal of the Institution. 



A note by Mr. F. Rilstone on Cornish Sphagna has been 

 published in Journal of Botany, Sep. 1922, pp. 263-67 '. 



Note. By " Yearl's Coombe, Trelawney river," in the 

 Perrycoste records, is intended the stretch of the West Looe 

 river valley above (i.e. N. of) Sowden s Bridge. Yearl's 

 Coombe is a lateral valley running westward from the above. 



