186 THE LIFE AND WORK OF GEORGE DON. 
Poa pratensis var. 
On upland pastures. 
[A form with large florets near to P. subcwerulea, Sm.— 
oS oD 
Poa anceps. 
A new species on rocks, but rare. 
[In Herb., Smith, this is localised from the Clova mountains. 
It appears to be an intermediate of P. Balfourii and nemorahs, 
but requires further study.—G. C. D.] 
Poa depauperata, nova species. 
On rocks near the sea at Dundee. 
| = P. leptostachya, D. Don, in Mem. Wern. Soc., ttt., p. 299 
(1821). Banks of the Tay to the west of Dundee. Geo. Don, 
who cultivated it under the name of depauperata for many years. 
It is a monstrosity, not a species, having something of the 
habit of P. compressa, but the florets are quite malformed. See 
Journ. Bot. 177 (1903).—G. C. D.] 
Poa, nova species. 
Near Arbroath. 
[Glyceria species probably.—G. C. D.| 
Poa, nova species. 
This rare species I discovered near Arbroath. 
[Glyceria species probably.—G. C. D.] 
Briza maxima. 
At Newington Butts near London. 
[A casual, of course.—G. C. D.] 
Dactylis glaucous. Of the Continental catalogues, as I suppose 
. . . . it seems a very different species from the D 
glomerata. On the sea-coast not unfrequent. 
{It is a robust glaucous form of D. glomerata.—G. C. D.]| 
Festuca glauca. 
On the sea-coast. 
ae os of Festuca rubra; not the F. glauca of Lamarck.— 
Hy eae © 
