﻿146 NOTES ON KENTISH PLANTS OBSERVED CUBING 1893. 



and Smeeth Stations, copse at Willesborough Lees, and near Head- 



E. Lamyi F. Schultz. Abundant and clearly native in a copse 

 at Willesborough Lees, 15. 



tl 



and E. obscurum x parvifio nun. With 

 By several ponds near Head- 

 Between Westenhanger and 



Smeeth Stations, 15.* 



Erijwjium mantimum L. Near Port Victoria, 16.* 



Galium sp. ? A small bedstraw which I found in some quantity 



on the high chalky table-land near Paddlesworth, 15, t and supposed, 



at the time of its discovery, to be a variety of G. sylvestre Poll., does 



not agree well with any British 



sington, nor have Mr. Bennett and othi 



While bearing some resemblance to G. sylvestre 

 to G. erectum, it will probably require a new name, unless further 

 research should show it to be already known on the Continent. 

 Having neglected to send home roots, I hope to collect this 

 interesting plant again, and study its characters more closely. 

 From what I know of the surroundings, the theory of a hybrid 

 origin seems to me unlikely ; but the fruit was too young to be of 



Myosotis palustris With., var. strigulosa (Reichb.). Strongly- 

 marked, in ditches about a mile south-west of Charing, 15. 



Bartsia Odontites Hedw., var. verna Reichb. Abundant in a 

 small spinney on the chalk above Elham, 15. 



Chenopodium murale L. A small, prostrate plant, found on 

 shingly ground near the sea between Littlestone and Dymchurch, 

 15, is considered by Mr. Bennett to be var. humile Wallroth ; of 

 this I have not yet seen a description. 



C. rubrum L., var. pseudobotryoides Watson. On shingle, between 

 Sandwich and Pegwell Bay, associated with Arenaria serpytlifolia 

 ■ 



Salicornia appressa Dumortier. On mud, near Littlestone-on- 



type-spec 

 habit (I i 



growing in good 

 ticed this little plant in September, 1891, and suggested 

 name for it in Journ. Bot. 1892, p. 179. Having had an 

 opportunity of studying it earlier in the season, I now feel pretty 

 certain of its identity, though I have not yet succeeded in getting 

 3-specimens to examine. The very characteristic and constant 

 ' T " ad no " shading-off " into other forms) appears to warrant 

 • in allotting specific rank to it in his Opuscules de Botan- 

 ique, where in the course of his remarks on Belgian Salicorniae, he 

 est celle que, dans notre 

 l de S. prostrcttn y .' appressa 

 et que M. Crepin, dans la derni&re edition de son Manuel, vient 

 d'appeler S. herbacea var. moniliformis a cause de ses 6pis parfois 

 moniliformes. Cette plante nous parait s'floigner sensiblement de 

 la S. prostrata de Pallas et former une espece distincte, comme nous 

 le presumions deja il y a 42 ans. Nous la designerons sous le nom 

 de S. appressa. Sa tige est humifuse et ses rameaux sont entiere- 



