SHORT NOTES. 85 
Warren, near Frodingham , and a publication of the fact was given 
at p. 184 of the ‘ Botanical Record Club Report’ for 1875, after an 
examination of a Mr. a ates’s pasta in fruiting state ; 
the other a creeping, barren branch. The stratum upon which 
they grew, and the general contin ns of the site, being very similar to 
those of the West Gloucester L. complanatum, Mr. Druce suggested 
that the Lincoln plan had in reality been complanatum also. 
mea it might coaitty be so, I athe Farodirredd the loan of what 
Tatoolnahixs species. They were oanaeed | in 1857, by Messrs. W. 
Fowler an Page : a spot where ironworks now stand; and 
they are, as you may see, undoubtedly typical alpinum, not even 
showing that approach &s a complanate arrangement of the leaves 
which is presented by Mr. Dries s intermediates gathered in West 
Ross and South Aberdeen. His Glydyr Fawr specimens seem to 
me sim 
intermediate form grows on Ingleborough, in West Yorkshire, the 
approach to complanatum being most evident whilst the plant is 
young and barren, and spreads fan-like upon the ground; but I 
should call none of these true complanatum, nor indeed expect that 
to occur at all in our more alpine stations, since even e United 
States the typical plant has a tendency to southern restriction, na 
in Canada and the North becomes sabinafolium Willd.—F. Arnoip 
Boe: [The specimens sent are —— L, alpinum.—Ep. Journ. 
ICULARIA NEGLECTA Lehm MippLesE = satiar a oe, 
Chan J. R. Jackson, nd mel found this species Ge 
aderavie quantity, in the autumn of 1881, in sever aber ponds 
near the railway-station between ‘Bhainids and Wra sbury. At 
I was in doubt whether to credit Bucks or Middlesex with the n ae 
record, but a reference to the railway ps ae settled the matter 
in favour of the latter county. In the first place it is better to 
state that Professor Babington, who kindly examined my plant, 
has confirmed the name. The et ure in ‘ English Botany,’ ii., tab. 
1125 bis, is a bad one; the foliage, as represented there, gives no 
idea of the foliage of ie living rate and the form of the lip too 
is quite unlike that in the fresh flower—indeed, the only character 
ticularly observed in the fresh state, viz., the veining of the palate. 
In Brébisson’s ‘ Flore de # Notinandlie, ed. 5. p. 306, the italicized 
portions of the descriptions oe U. vulgaris, on U, neglecta are as 
follow: The first named has “ Fleurs d’un jaune clair . 
palais 
— d’un petit nombre aa lignes on taches d’un hd pale, nou 
. palais 
anastomosées’’: the latter, ‘Fleurs d’un jaune-orang 
# 
