850 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
Cat. this is given as occurring in Ireland only, but the authors of 
Cybele Hibernica do not venture to separate calcareum from collinum ; 
while Hind, in Fl. Suffolk, places the Newmarket tong under 7’ 
minus aS var. montanum Wallr., oo he considers as synonymous 
with 7. flexuosum Bernh., a name which precedes that of collinum 
of Wallroth, —_— there ony be a point as to the Cat. Hort. 
Erf, (1815), where 7. flexuosum was published by Bernhardi, being 
a valid paren: In Babington’s Manual, T. coll’num is re as 
a variety of T. majus Sm. e late Herr Freyn was disposed to 
the i this pleat specimens I sent him. At actige market, nes the 
spots it reaches a height of two or three feet.—G. CuaripGEe Drvce. 
ep 
and submitted them to the late Herr "Maximowicz, and + 
Schumann, but they both hesitated to give a name. I think it is 
nearest 7’, montanum bbe var. y glandulosum Wallr. Sch. Crit. 
255, 1822.”—Ar. Brn 
T. Kocum Fr. vans, Langdale, ibis = 2 July, 1905. 
Abundant in Great Langdale, from Dungeon Gh yll to Skelwith 
Bridge, a occu mate also in Take oreo The 
uae] 
Ranunou — L. forma. A completely prostrate, but 
not rooting ote: Growing on damp spots at Gerrard’s Cross 
Common, Bucks, July, 1905” —G. C. Druce. ‘There is a root on 
one of the specimens, and the Paty of nodal-rooting is evident 
on two or three others.,—Ep. « all the specimens seen by 
e 
damp, shaded ee ee the plants are cig age Th 
amount of fruit produced by the aggregate varies in different 
districts. An e caingoation of about 1000 plants in nthe vicinity 
of Bristol Ciiwad that at Westbury-on-Trym only 1 in 400 was 
fertile: near Long Ashton the proportion was 1 in "150 and 
about the same at Scukwail I have been told a near Norton 
Malreward heads of carpels can be found “in every ditch,”—a 
eeney that might not, opiblege be greater than ‘that I have last 
ned.—Jas. W. Wur 
a A RADICANS See At the upper end of Loch Tummel, 
Mid Perth, July, 1905. A new cou nty record. Some of the 
specimens were the nearest to Forster's plant that I have yet seen, 
even the radical leaves being nearly pa wee in ee I saw 
it also near Methuen Bog, in the same vice-co.—G. CiarineE 
