NOTES ON ‘THE LONDON CATALOGUE,’ ED. 10 313 
1-2cm. sone anther 0°3cm.; staminodia capitellata, 0-2 em. long. 
Ovarium 0-4 cm., ee glaber, 1-3 cm. lon 
Differs from ruculosa Lindau chiefly i in leaves, short in- 
florescences, ovate eck ag short calyx-lobes, purple (not white) 
corollas with a shorter tube, and greatly reduced staminodes. 
f B. nyanzarwm Burkill, reported recently from the Semliki 
Valley, Ruwenzori (Journ. Linn. Soc. xxxviii. p. 270), Dr. Bagshawe 
sends fine specimens from the Budongo Forest, Unyoro (no. 1506). 
ExpLaNation or PuatE 495. 
The figures are enlarged unless otherwise stated. 
oi A. 1. Swynnertonia cardinea. View of portion of : re (nat. 
size). ge! column with outer and inner corona. 3. air of des an 
Baki Eylesia buchneroides. The plant (nat. goa 2.A Siveckad spike 
NOTES ON ‘THE LONDON CATALOGUE,’ ep. 10. 
By THE Rev. E. S. Marsnatt, M.A., F.L.S. 
(Concluded from p. 289.) 
Bi oe mason Ehrh. Var. platypterus Fr. is 
anomalous in the genus, and a rare form; so I have taken stenop- 
terus Fr. as the type, falc wine Sterneck. 
sui R. Perrrert Chabert. This is quoted by Sterneck i 
his monogfaph as a synonym of his Alectorolophus Pistilli, sid 
pet antedates it. 
1290. MeLAMPYRUM PRATENSE L. ¢. ERICETORUM Oliver 
is also a predominantly alpine or subalpine form ; but I have seen 
no Irish specimens. It is associated with Oxycoccus at Wybun 
132 _Tsymus Cuam=prys. The paper on Thymus by Dr. 
Domin and Loe Jackson (Journ. Bot. 1908, 33) appeared too late 
og- 
rhgoee 7 (chalk downs) near Cambridge; it ae well with Koch’s 
description, yeu Mr. Bennett endorsed the 
1352. Sracnys annua L. Objection fe geen taken to the 
starring of the spect. which is mostly a casual; but, as is men- 
tioned in the Flora of Kent, it has occurred there abundantly 
on open downs at a distance from cultivation, and may even be 
native. 
1360. LamruM monLucceLiironium Fr. This is misspelt in 
the text. The refusal to admit L. intermedium Fr., published 
simultaneously as a better name, strikes me as most arbitrary—a 
