NOTES ON ‘THE LONDON CATALOGUE,’ ED. 10 985 
owing to the extreme difficulty of erected defining the ——— 
of the various plants placed under them. I believe the Irish 
hibernica, which has hairy leaves and woolly styles, to be cori- 
folia , ——— and the E. Salleiintis var. glabra is clearly 
glauca X spinosissima. 
bee R. pumMetToruM Thuill. b. oprusrFo“ia (Desv.). This 
s to me quite misplaced here; if not the type of the tomentella- 
pir it should be treated as a parallel species. 
EMPERVIRENS L. Add b. Metvint (Towndrow). What 
is the status (native or naturalised) of this rose? It was referred 
by Crépin to &. —-o and seems to be unknown on the 
Continent. 
612. Pyrus INTERMEDIA Ehrh. Some Se eae identify this 
with P. scandica ers. ; but our zntermedia of the 
and Cheddar is lainl distinct from that, and I believe it to be 
really P. Arta x torminalis. 
628. snes Geum L. Mr. R. W. Scully, who has for 
some time past made a special study of this intricate group, 
informs me Enat the typical plant, with reniform, crenate leaves, 
occurs in Kerry, though it is scarce. 
673. CaLuiTRicHE PALUsTRIS L. An unsatisfactory name, as 
applied to is segregate C. vernalis Koch. 
676. C. mvrermepia Hoffm. Add b. PEDUNCULATA (DC.) ; an 
unterteciaed oversight. 
. C. oprusancuta Le Gall b. Lacam (Warren). Mr. 
Druce writes this lachit; but in 1890, Lord de Tabley (J. L. 
Warren) told me that the name was as taken rien : sheet of water 
on his estate, called “The Lache.” I hav no specimens ; 
but the description suggests a hybrid eg viz. 7. C. intermedia xX 
obtusangula. 
687. Ermosrum cottinum Gmel. I have seen two specimens 
of this distinct - gest from anold Surrey herbarium, labelled simply 
“ Scotland.” It n Icelandic, Scandinavian, and Pyrenean 
plant, ay to be Setoenid 3 in the Highlands, and may perhaps also 
oc ong the Welsh hills. See Journ. Bot. 1904, 110. 
695. E. coarse Lam. The census- nigtabes (24) 
has slipped ou 
698. bia AMMOPHILA Focke. I have lately examined 
afresh the evening primrose so abundant on the Era near 
Burry Port and Kidwelly, Carmarthenshire, and found i 
identical with the Burnham plant named by Dr. Focke. 
722. Carum Petrosetinum Benth. & Hook. fil. This ought 
to be starred, being naturalized on ruins (Scully) ; Ihave only seen 
it mporadioaly, so far as I can remem suri 
7 LIuM PALUSTRE L. b. ELONGATUM (Presl.). Nyman is 
probably right j in upholding this as a La beast species; with us it 
is pre-eminently a fenland plant. 
808. CenrrantaHus CancrrrAPA Dufr. hardly deserves inclu- 
