12. CARYOPHYLLACER. 491 
Arenaria montana, Linn. 
Province - 8. Wimbledon Common, Surrey, 1858, 1865. 
Alien. Prof. W. T. Dyer, in E. C. report 1865. 
Arenaria (serpyllifolia) Lloydii, Jord. 
Provinces 123-1011. Corn. Wight. Kent. York? Durham? 
Syn. 178. A contracted form, growing on stony or sandy soils 
exposed to sea winds. I cannot separate Mr. Lloyd’s own French 
specimens from those of our southern coasts, notably, of the Isle 
of Wight; and seeds of these latter, sown in an inland garden, 
produced plants scarcely distinguishable from the forms usually 
seen in fields and by road-sides. York and Durham are quoted 
from the Exchange Club report for 1861; but whether the 
examples from those counties are the same with those of the 
southern coasts, I am not prepared to say. 
Arenaria (serpyllifolia) leptoclados, Guss. 
Provinces 12345--891011. Scotland? 
Syn. 178. An opposite state to Lioydii; being distinguished by 
slenderness and diffuseness, with small capsules, narrower sepals, 
etc. Dr. Boswell Syme remarks that the extreme forms of this 
and sph@rocarpa (the type form) are widely different, ‘« but so many 
specimens have come under my notice which cannot be satisfactorily 
assigned either to the one or to the other, that it seems to me 
better to consider them as varieties than to admit them as sub- 
species”; Eng. bot. ii. 103. Certainly, some good English 
botanists label specimens by the name ‘ leptoclados’ which appear 
to my own eyes to be inseparable from ordinary serpyllifolia. 
Arenaria (verna) Gerardi, Willd. 
Province 1. The Lizard, West Cornwall. The only county? 
Syn. 180. Cyb.i. 219. This form alone in Cornwall? 
Arenaria laricifolia, Lightf. (not of Linn.) 
Province - 15. Castle hill, near Forfar; Lightf. Scot. 
Error. The plant intended was A. verna. 
Arenaria fastigiata, Sm. 
Province - 15. Forfar; Fife; G. Don. 
Error? Cyb. i. 220. Dr. Arnott intimated in the British Flora 
that he was in possession of Clova specimens “from Drummond as 
well as Don.” But Drummond may have got them from Don or 
from Don's garden. And Dr. Arnott himself suggests, under 
the head of Carex hordeiformis, that Drummond did distribute 
specimens from Don’s garden, as if collected elsewhere and wild. 
Stellaria (media) Boreana, Jord. & 8. neglecta, Weihe. 
Provinces - 2-10. ‘Isle of Wight and Yorkshire ;” Eng. bot. il. 95. 
Syn. 185. Two forms of chickweed learnedly named. 
Stellaria (media) umbrosa, “ Opitz.” Bab. man. 
Provinces 123-10. Kent; Ed. Edwards, 1846. 
