816 | ‘THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
I. Rauranent Baker fil. in Mitt. Bot. Mus. Zurich, xxii. p. 189. 
(Amecarpus.) 
Hab. German South-West Africa: Hereroland, Ojikango, Rau- 
tanen, no. 464! Herb. Mus. Brit. ; herb. Schinz. Quaiputs, Dinter, 
no. se aah Schinz. 
ote.—I, oliyantha Harms and I. sangana Harms, in 
Behlechien, West Afr. Kaut. Exp. p. 291, names only. 
WATSON EXCHANGE CLUB REPORT, 1904-5. 
[Tue following notes are extracted from the Report of the 
Watson Botanical Exchange Club for 1904-5, and should have 
appeared earlier. Mr. William Bell was distributor for the year; 
the Secretary of the Club is now Mr. George Goode, De Freville 
Avenue, Cambridge. For notes on Rubus, Saari and Euphrasia, 
reference must be made to the Report.—Ep. Journ. Bor.] 
ARDAMINE AMARA LL, var. ERUBESCENS Petermann. This plant 
it is pro roba bly the same as the v e Deeke Presl. forma lilacina Beck 
(fl. Nieder-Osterr. 453). Otto E. Schulz, the author of the mono- 
graph of the genus Cardamine in Engl. ba = xxxii. 501 (1903), 
who has seen a specimen, calls it “ C. a L, var. erubescens 
the Bark rrey plant. In Bot. Exch. Club phages 1888, p. 200, Mr. 
Druce ras a aoe on a pink-flowered form of C. amara from Hey- 
ford, Oxon, and in his Flora of Ozfordshire, p. 28, is noted a hybrid 
C. amara X pratensis growing at the same place, *the flowers 
darker in colour than pratensis, having more of a purplish tint, but 
slightly smaller than amara; the anthers violet, as in amara, but 
the style nearer that of pratensis. There appears to be no reference 
to this hybrid in the European Floras.”’ Miss Katherine Fitzgerald, 
who discovered the plant in Surrey, and submitted specimens to 
Kew, says that ‘the plant nearest the water is quite white, the 
pale lilac dagen found some feet from the water and in less 
abundance 
Rosa ntosa Sm. var. psevpo-moxiis H.G. Baker. Cowleigh 
Park, Herefordshire, v. a 86, July 4th and Apane. 9th, 1904.— 
S. H. Bicmmau. I don ow pseudo-mollis, but this plant does 
not remind me of al “The leaves are perhaps more hairy than 
usual, but not more so than in many of my specimens of tomentosa, 
which ‘Species also frequently has equally persistent sepals. Possibly 
