266 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
SHORT NOTES. 
ANAGALLIS ARVENSIS AND A. CHRULEA.—On referring to num- 
bers of the Journal published while I was in South America, I 
came across Mr. Edwards’s note on these plants (Journ. Bot. 
1906, 368). His experience of them on the Inferior Oolite tallies 
exactly with my own on the Chalk at Oxted, Surrey, though I 
have i 
. arvensis and a distinet species A. cerulea. I am more doubtful 
as to the occurrence of two red ones.—G. 8. BouncEr. 
[Many years ago, when I first found the Blue Pimpernel wild in 
cornfields at Saunderton, near High Wycombe, I was struck with 
its very different appearance from the blue-flowered plant which 
I had seen as a garden weed and had regarded as a mere colour- 
variation of A. arvensis. To the history of the plant as recorded 
b : 
unde es A. 
with the inaccurate reference “ Mill. Gard. Dict. ed. 8, i. (1785) 
177, n. 2”; it should however appear under their var. 8 cerulea.— 
EN.] 
Ise of Wicut Puants.—It may be worth recording that 
Pinguicula lusitanica which I have long deemed extinct in the 
Isle of Wight has been found in a new locality, boggy ground near 
B he : ~ 8 
t 
than one hundred feet and with a gravelly subsoil. I believe it 
has not hitherto been noticed nearer than Surrey.—G. Goong. 
