SHORT NOTES 108 
last July by me :—Plantago Corono ratophyllon Rapin 
G. em names thus some luxuriant specim m 
speare s Cliff near Dover.—Var. tenuisectis-hirsuta Wirtg., on the 
shingle at Dungeness. 
stone-on-Sea as this hybrid. It grew in association with both t 
assumed parents, and is probably the 4. reer of English sath 
for the greater part.—Festuca rubra L. var. juncea Hackel, Little- 
stone-on-Sea, growing in the sand, Aabtlons the var. arenaria 0 
many authors.—Bromus hordeaceus L. var. confertus (Mab.) = var. 
contractus (Lange), Littlestone-on-Sea ; new to district 10.— 
grostis alba Li. var. coarctata Hoffm., Littlestone- on-Sea.—G. Cra- 
RIDGE DrucE 
Isnarpia patustris L, Sp. Pl. p.120, 1758 (Ludwigia apetala Walt. 
Fl. Data. | 89, 1788).—The mention by ‘the Rey. E. F. Linton (p. 43) 
of two additional stations for this rare species, called to my mind a 
station not given by Mr. Townsend in his Flora of Hampshire, 
which is probably one of those named by Mr. Linton. In the 
Phytologist, iii. 1098 (1850) (foot-note), under Leersia oryzoides, 
Dr. W. A. Bromfield says: ‘‘I was fortunate to discover a third 
Hants station for the Isnardia on the 25th of August last, namely 
in a damp spot (apparently a waterway in the winter months) in 
the heart of the New Forest, between two of the branches or 
tributaries of the Boldre river, a litile to the north-west of New 
Park Enclosure, and oy : two miles in the same direction from 
Brockenhurst Bridge, an exactly similar ee ll i! that of the 
Isnardia _on Petersfield “Heath, and where it o¢ as there in 
Gaet a refinding of the species on Petersfield Heath. Mr. . 
Barton says (Phyt. ii. 228, n.s., 1857) that his father found it there 
‘*some twenty years back.” Mr. Townsend has “1885?” as the 
sophical Society t there are specimens from Dr. Bromfield (Herb. 
Dalton) from*the tooaliby. dated 1830. Mr. Townsend’s last date 
- Petersfield Heath is 1848; but I have a specimen gathered by 
- Collins in 1852, Since that date I have been unable to 
rice it there, and Mr. Beeby and I searched for it unsuccessfully 
some years ago. Mr. Borrer found it in Sussex in 18 it was 
gathered about 1843 by W. W. res but since that date I cannot 
ascertain that anyone has found it. In August, 1873, I made & 
careful but unsuccessful search ee it. It seems to be quite 
extinct at St. Peter’s Marsh, 1 the last specimens I have 
seen were dated 1874.—Artaur BENNE' 
CumBEeRLAND Prantrs.— While at Piste last August, I gathered 
in Borrowdale some se? which Mr. Townsend has kindly 
identified as follows :—Euphrasia borealis Towns. (with some sligh 
doubt), E. gracilis Fries, E. nemorosa H. Mart., and E. aa Fries 
var. glabrescens. Epilobium roseum X montanum grew on slate- 
