SHORT NOTES AND QUFRIES, 209 
the same neighbourhood, occurred Carex divulsa, Euonymus europaeus, 
Clematis Vitalba, and in several places on walls wley I saw 
Festuca pseudo-Myurus, and the brachycarpa variety of Draba verna. 
The Zrigonella near Hillingdon Place Lodge was in nice flower.—J. 
L. Warren. 
_ 
ranthus, Bromus maximus, Cynosurus echinatus, 
Lagurus, and such like aliens. (I may say that several Orchids 
distinct species acc 
Koch and Woods, and one not unlikely from its Continental distribution 
to be found in the Channel Isles. I have writtento Dr. A. Collenette 
for fuller particulars as to the locality, &c., of the plant he gathered for 
in their characters between typical O. palustris, Jacq., and O. laxiflora, 
and are one of a chain of forms which connect the two plants, which 
can therefore be scarcely separated even as varieties. The points relied 
upon for their discrimination are the length of the central lobe of the 
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coloured, wh | 2 : 
purple. This test would put Dr. Collenette’s Guernsey plant into the 
Bal form. Probably the forms grow intermixed there.—Zd. Journ. 
ot. 
