REPORT FOR 1914. 



145 



careful drying would give one a better chance to judge." — E. S. 

 Marshall. " Probably C. stagnalisJ' — G. C. Druce. 



Epilohium roseum Schreb. [Ref. No. 658.] By a small spring in 

 a clayey bank, Halstead, N. Essex, v.-c. 19, August 23, 1914. — Gr. C. 

 Brown. "No; certainly a state of E. obsturum.'' — E. S. Marshall. 



Epilohium alsinefolium Vill. Mountain streamlet, the Red Screes, 

 over Kirkstoiie Pass, Westmoreland, v.-c. 69, July 29, 1914. — C. 

 Waterfall. "Yes." — E. !S. Marshall. 



Circaea aljjina L., b. intermedia Ehrh. Roadside, on way to 

 Jenkin's Crag, x^mbleside, Westmoreland, v.-c. 69, July 22, 1914.— 

 C. Waterfall. " I cannot separate this from the type. C. inter- 

 media Ehrh. is a much larger plant." — E. S. Marshall. 



Astrantia major L., var. involucrata Koch. Tayside, Mid Perth, 

 July 1905. Quite naturalised on the banks of the Tay below Perth, 

 where very luxuriant plants are to be seen. The variety is described 

 in the Synopsis Fl. Germ.^ p. 280, 1837, as "involucri foliola umbella 

 sesquilongiora, ad apicem rarius uno-alterove denticulo, nec vero in 

 omnibus foliolis, nequein singulis regulariter, instructa." — G. C. Druce. 



Cicuta virosa L. Banks of river, Salhouse, v.-c. 27, July 9, 1914. 

 — F. Robinson. 



Pimpinella Saxifraga L., var. dissecta Druce. Avebury Down, 

 N. Wilts, v.-c. 7, August 5, 1913.— W. C. Barton. "Towards this, 

 but character not very good, in my one small plant." — E. S. Marshall. 



Anthriscus vulgaris Bernh. Seedlings. Sandy bank, near Ketter- 

 ing, v.-c. 32, March 22, 1914.— G. Chester. 



Selinum Garvifolia L. Chippenham Fen, Cambridge, August 

 1903. Of somewhat uncertain occurrence. That year it was in great 

 profusion, but in other years but few plants were seen. Unless 

 intentionally sown there, it has the appearance of being native. — 

 G. C. Druce. 



Galium Mollugo L., var. Bakeri Syme. Cliff tops, Milford-on-Sea, 

 S. Hants, August 1914. — J. Comber. "To me a reduced form of 

 Mollugo. The leaves are unlike the var. Bakeri." — A. Bennett. 

 " Under that, I think ; but some of the leaves broaden out unusually 

 upwards." — E. S. Marshall. "Surely not Bakeri which should have 

 more or less linear-lanceolate leaves, etc. Is not this a reduced state 

 of ordinary Mollugo {elatum), frequently found on sea cliffs '? " — C. E. 

 Salmon. 



