316 THE JOURNAL GF BOTANY 



cyperm L. (Gloucester, abundant), Glyceria distansy^Bhlh. (FYHuii- 

 lode), Leptiirus filiformis Trin. (Framilode). — H. J. Kiddelsdell. 



Jersey Plants. — In the list of errors, ambiguities, and plants 

 recorded for Jersey on insufficient authority at the end of Lester- 

 Garland's Flora I find Chenopodium ruhrum L. " Jersey. Prof. 

 La Gasca " ; and Artemisia maritima L. " Mr. B. Saunders." 

 Both were gathered by me in August last ; the former on some 

 waste ground by First Tower Station, and the latter at Gorey and 

 Anne Port. At Gorey also I came across' several plants of Chlora 

 perfoUata L., an addition to the island flora. I gave specimens 

 of both to Mr. Picquet, who showed me Chenopodium ruhrum L. 

 growing in a pot at the back of his premises. On a ramble over 

 the Quenvais to St. Ouens Pond with Mr. J. W. Attenborough, 

 of St. Helier's, he pointed out to me a Pyrus on a sandy ridge, 

 which proved to be P. Achras. Euphrasia nemorosa Pers. is the 

 form I noticed on the Quenvais ; Erythrcsa Centaiirium L. var. 

 suhcapitata Corb. {fide J. A. Wheldon) occurs sparingly in the 

 same locality. — Samuel Gasking. 



Eanunculus ophioglossifolius Yill. (p. 259). — I saw this 

 species near Cheltenham a week later than Mr. Druce, and was 

 surprised to find it in good quantity over a very small area. It 

 covered some two or three square yards, in one big patch, and 

 several smaller ones, with an outlier in less swampy ground. At 

 fifty yards' distance I took it for a mass of B. sceleratus L. The 

 locality is the same as that in which it was originally discovered, 

 and not a different one, as Mr. Druce supposes (Journ. Bot. 1912, 

 p. 259). A few days earlier than the occasion recorded in Journ. 

 Bot. 1890, p. 282, it was found by a Cheltenham botanist, but on 

 both sides of the hedge. It is now" lost on one side of the hedge — 

 that, namely, there referred to, but it is all one locality. It was 

 in much greater quantity than in previous years. No further 

 trace of the species could I find, though many neighbouring 

 ditches and ponds were searched. A supply was taken for the 

 Botanical Exchange Club without making any impression on the 

 quantity. — H. J. Eiddelsdell. 



Montia Segregates (p. 230). — Montia fo7itana L. The 

 specimens of this segregate in Hb. Ley are from Mitcheldean 

 Meend, v.-c. 34 ; Bredwardine and E. Grwyne, v.-c. 36 ; Pennard 

 Cliffs, v.-c. 41 ; Aberedw, v.-c. 43 ; in Hb. Purchas from Forest of 

 Dean, v.-c. 34. M. lamprosperma Cham, in the latter herbarium 

 is from Kingussie, v.-c. 96 (coll. J. T. Syme), and Clova, v.-c. 90 

 (coll. D. Ohver) ; in Hb. Ley from Capel Curig, v.-c. 49 ; Talyllyn 

 Lake, v.-c. 42 ; and (var. boreo-rivularis Lindb.) from a ditch at 

 Llwynmadoc, v.-c. 42. — H. J. Eiddelsdell. 



Utricularia Bremii in England. — Mr. W. H. Pearsell of 

 Dalton-in-Furness has sent me specimens in flower of the above 

 plant. They were gathered in a peat-bog. The flowers are dis- 

 tinctly sulphur-coloured, the spurs " more pronounced " in some, 

 and with the rounded label. Mr. Pearsell remarks : " The dis- 



