856 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
elongata rather than C. paniculata, as the scarious margins to the 
g ae are e peaches y absent. ewes earlier than C. pantculata.— 
‘ ‘It is remarkable how of late years the 
sine d rie, oa of this Car ex 58 been increased. It is nowon 
ot for eight counties in Britain.”—Ar. Bz 
C. Hornscaucuiana Bab. Black Down on Mendip, N. Somerset, 
at 1050 ft., June 23rd, 1905.—Jas. W. Wurrs. oe ngs cite 
Hoppe, which many British botanists persist in naming C. fulva 
Good., though that is almost certainly a hybr id of Borasckichtand 
with one of the flava-Gideri group. One specimen on sheet 
is probably a hybrid with C. deri var. wdocarpa.”—Epw 
MarsHaLt. 
Spartina Townsenpr Groves. Salt marsh between Sturt Pond 
lord and Hurst Castle, S. Hants, Oct. 14th, aga In 1895 
le 
now is most plentiful, and evidently is ‘apililly increasing. I tr -aced 
it as far as Keyhaven to the north, but there it is not so abundant 
at A ete —J. Cosmo Menvitt. In some quant ty by the Fever 
ospital, Poole, Dorset, v.-c. 9, with Salicornia radicans and Suada 
fructicosa, Oct. 1905. I cannot find a record for Dorset in Top. 
Bot 
Pied of ‘Dorsit: "Kip. Ihave no doubt a recent introduction to 
the Dorset coast. I did not see it near ae when I carefully 
worked the coast some years ago.—G. C. Dru 
ALorEcuRuS GENicuLatus L. forma. In Beading. salt marshes, 
Isle of Wight, Pant 1905.—G. Cuariwce Drucz. ‘The normal 
form,”’—Dr. H 
3 IDUS akin Banks of the Soar, Belgrave, Leicester- 
shire, yi ali 1905. The plants now distributed come from the third 
known locality in this county, and spe a ta relationship with 
A. pratensis than to A. geniculatus. converse is seen in speci- 
mens recently sent to the Club from Birstall, a ee ee 
. Jackson.—A oRwoop. See Report rts B. E. C 
p- 650, and 1902, p. 61. ee re From the habit and sion: 
of the inflorescence I think that this is cca (as suggested) 
A. geniculatus x pratensis.’,-—Epw. 8. Mar 
GRosTIs pALusTRis Huds. forma. Ro is ia near Shirle ey, 
brown.”—W. R. Lrvrov. ‘* Agrostis alba Li. Be Pl. i. 63, 1753. 
A. palustris Huds. Fil. Angl. i. 27, 1762. I have no 5 apadtivas 
to compare, but this plant seems in the direction of var. limosa 
Asch. & Graeb. Syn. Fil. Mit. ri 174, 1889.”—Ar. Benyert. 
“No rere form.’’—E. Hacks 
