NOTES ON DORSET PLANTS. 81 
habit ; ie not likely that a weed of cultivation should produce a 
plant preferring a gravelly waste for a habitat. 
Atriplex Babingtonii oe var. virescens Lange. Studland, 
Name given by Mr. Ar. Bennett 
Polygonum Persicaria L., var. m3 Gr. & Godr. Rage vw 
garden, near Bournemouth. — P. minori-Persicaria A. Boggy 
border of a ditch, Wareham. I sock this for a strangely and 
suberect variet of P. minus Huds., but, after some discussion wi 
r. Ar. Bennett, accepted his suggestion of. the above name. It 
should be added that P. Persicaria was present in quantity, but P, 
minus was not seen, and is exceedingly rare in Dorset. — ite 
Schrank. Wareham; Sturminster Marshall, and Shapwick. 
Betula glutinosa Fr, var. pubescens Wallr. Boggy hollow, Kinson. 
Salix triandra L., var. Hofimanniana Sm. Wareham 
S. Smithiana Willd. Wareham. — 8. aurita-cinerea Wimm. (x 8. 
lutescens oe soggy to Ulwell ; Kinson.—S. repens L., var. 
tra Kin 
eae diffusus oe oppe. Wet pasture near Bailey Gate. — J. 
supinus Moench, var. Kochii Bab. Man. Talbot Heath. —J. acuti- 
Slorus x Paitginiesl on: (Buchenau). Growing with both parents by 
Littles 
sulea li, Wareham (district D). 
Pomapiaste rufescens Schrad. In a boggy drain near Wareham 
with P. acutifolius Link. Recorded for the county, but not in the 
Dorset Flora 
Scirpus Savii Seb. et Maur. (S. numidianus eae Brackish 
drain near Hamworthy. Junetion, 
Carex axillaris Good. Growing ith C. remota tae C. vulpina 
near Swanage. Sir e D. Hooker, in the Student's Flora, suggests 
C. remota and C, muricata as the probable parents of C. axillaris. 
But is it not mare, naharss ths that if owes its origin (if a hybrid) to 
C. remota and C, v vulpina, which I see is quoted in Townsend's 
Flora of Hants as the opinion of M. Crépin 
Briza minor L.  Lyt chett Minster. Apparently not often met 
with in et. 
Festuca rubra L., var. pruinosa Hackel. Durlstone Head. — 
elatior L., var. pseudo- loliacea Hackel. Very fine by the River Pad 
Sturminster Marshall. 
Bromus secalinus L. Plentiful in the same meadow as the last. 
This looks like a native station, as the meadow es — and, bein 
evidence in favour of the grass being native, which occurrence 
of it in meadow-land otherwise affords. — B. erectus hele var. 
villosus Bab. Chalk slopes between Swanage and Studland. 
Nitella translucens Agardh. Pond near Bournemouth, of recent 
formation, but fed by one of the sources of the Bourne. Mr. James 
Groves to the name. New to the county. 
JougnaL or Borany,—Vow. 29, [Marca, 1891.] G 
