REPORT FOR 1914. 



173 



from sandy roadside, Freshfield, v.-c. 59, July 5, 1914. — J. A. Wheldon 

 and W. G. Travis. Also from sandy land, Cockley Cley, Swaffham, 

 W. Norfolk, v.-c. 28, June 23, 1914.— J. E. Little. "Fine and 

 characteristic." — E. S. Marshall. 



Corynephorus canescens Beauv. The Denes, Great Yarmouth, E, 

 Norfolk, v.-c. 27, 1913.— Coll. Dr F. Long; comm. G. C. Brown. 

 Also from North Denes, Great Yarmouth, v.-c. 27, August 13, 1914. 

 — F. Robinson. " Yes, the var. maritimus Godron Fl. Ft. iii., p. 502. 

 The common British plant." — G. C. Druce. 



Air a caryophyllea L., forma. Petit Bo Cliffs, Guernsey, April 

 1907. On ground where gorse had been burned the previous year. 

 Growing in prostrate tufts, much resembling Air a praecox. — G. C. 

 Druce. " Only in bud ; too young to afford grounds for a valid 

 opinion." — E. S. Marshall. 



Deschampsia Jtexuosa L., b. montana Hook. [Ref. No. 67]. 

 Heath land amongst Calluna, Thompson, v.-c. 28, July 4, 1914. — F. 

 Robinson. "No; only type. Var. montana is quite alpine." — E. S. 

 Marshall. " A heath form. In the true montana the panicle is 

 closed in fruit and the glumes are rich purple." — G. C. Druce. 



Arrhenatherum elatius M. and K., var. hiaristatum Druce. Near 

 Lydd, Kent, July 1914, and the first species to grow on the shingle beds 

 — that is, it approaches more closely to the sea than any other plant. 

 — G. C. Druce. 



Kceleria gracilis Pers. [Ref. No. 77]. Newmarket Heath, v.-c. 

 29, June 8, 1913. Is this type % It seems to be intermediate between 

 gracilis and hrita^mica in some respects. — W. C. Barton. "Material 

 too meagre; but I think it rightly named."— E. S. Marshall. 



Kceleria 1 [Ref. No. 112]. Sandy coast. Deal, East Kent, 



v.-c. 15, July 29, 1913. — W. C. Barton. " A small form of K. albescens 

 DC. ; new for Kent, I think." — E. S. Marshall. "I wish the lower 

 leaves on my specimen had been better shown. The plant suggests K. 

 albescens DC. In that species the radical leaves and the leaves of the 

 off-shoots are not flat as in gracilis, but enrolled-subulate. On the 

 whole, I think it is very likely to be albescens ; if so, a new county 

 record." — G. C. Druck. 



Koileria vallesiana Asch. and Graebn. Uphill and Brean Down, 

 N. Somerset, July 8, 1913. This grass seems to have recovered 

 ground ; there was a great quantity of it at Uphill, and a limited 

 quantity on Brean Down, but only a small proportion was in flower. — 

 H. J. Riddelsdell. 



