NOTES ON CAMBRIDGESHIRE PLANTS. 157 
Oaljetd lobi “tag Sem lineari-lanceolati, 0°55 cm. long. Corolle 
tubus abium anticum 0°6 cm. long., lobi 
pred sik 0-1 em. long. et lat., lobus intermedius rotundatus 
circa 0°2 cm. long. et lat. ; labium posticum antico equilongum 
ai stinet species, ae known by, inter alia, its white 
stem id dense glandular pubescence 
Hypoéstes antennifera 8. Medes: Muka. Nos. 918, 914. 
NOTES ON CAMBRIDGESHIRE PLANTS. 
By Axusert Hosxine. 
Ir is now forty-three years since the appearance of Professor 
Babington’s Flora of Cambridgeshire, and it seems time that the 
collation of the scattered records which have been published since 
then should be undertaken; this, with some further field-work, 
would form sufficient material for a new edition. he late W 
West, B. A., did mu ch useful work in ER direction; see his ‘ Noe 
ished 
246, and those of Mr. Arthur Bennett fale Bot. 1899, p. 243), 
Th 
. i. 9. 
thanks are due to Mr. Arthur Bennett for kindly looking 
over some of the plants mentioned. 
Ranunculus jac L. A form with ee ere flowers. 
1. Hills Road, three miles from Cambridge, June, 1897. It 
remains constant under cultivation in the Oanbeitee Botanic 
"+ Neckeria lutea Scop. 3. Old walls, Grantchester. : 
a officinale Scop. b. leiocarpum DC. iy Trumpington 
Road. 38. Grantchester, 1901. : 
Brassica Erucastrum Vill. 1. Deyvil’s Ditch, 1902, and since 
ot. 1894, 21. 
*Diplotawis muralis D. 6. b. Babingtonii Syme. 1. allway 
bridge, Linton, 1901. Mr. Spencer H. Bickham and a found 
mt + * . th . 
it as typical as those to be found on the South Denes, Sea 
but Mr. Arthur Bennett considers it D. i 
Peterman). 1. Gogmagogs, 1901. Toned a Mr. B. I. L 
A.L.S. retains its distinctive character on the rockery in the 
tanic Garden we . 
Polygala calearea F. Schultz. 1. Gogmagogs, 1899. Mr. Fryer 
