240 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 



var. rivularis, Gmel, I presume this is synonymous with the Lond. 

 Cat. var. major., All. % — G. C. Brown. " No ; this is M. verna, Necker 

 = M. chondros2Jerma, Fenzl, var. rivularis (Gmel. p.p.), with the seed of 

 Beeby's intermedia. The Linnean species described as M, fontana in 

 Sp. PI., so far as the references in Flora Suecica and Fl. Lapponica go 

 refer to the plant afterwards named lamprosperma by Chamisso, 

 which alone occurs in Scandinavia, and is the common plant of 

 Scotland, and it is the plant of the Linnaean herbarium. Some of the 

 synonyms added by Linneus in the Sp. PL may belong to the more 

 southern plant. It may be remarked that Gmelin neither describes 

 his plant as a variety or as a sub-species." — G. C. Druce. " This is 

 M. fontana, L., ssp. minor, Gmelin, var. intermedia, Beeby." — C. E. 

 Salmon. 



Jlypericuyn humifitsum, var. b. magnum, Bast. Roadside, 

 St. Andrews, Guernsey, Aug. 2, 1912. I gathered this variety in all- 

 parts of the island, but failed to find the type. — W. C. Barton. 

 "Are the sepals sufficiently serrate for this variety f — G. C. Druce. 



Malva sylvestris, L., var. acutiloha, Celak. Par Harbour, East 

 Cornwall, v.-c. 2, Oct. 1912. A well-marked variety, upright, 

 3 to 4 ft. high, leaves three or five lobed with long lobes, flowers 

 rather smaller than usual. — C. C. Yigurs. — "Yes, I found this at 

 Par in 1910, and Dr Thellung kindly identified it as Celakovsky's 

 acutiloha, which I also gathered at Twyford in Berks in 1890." — 

 G. C. Druce. 



Geranium molle, L., var. grandifiovum, Vis. Hedge-bank, St 

 David's, Fife, v.-c. 85, July 20, 1912.— M'T. Cowan, jun. "No; 

 G. pyrenaicum, Burm. fil." — J. Cryer and G. C. Druce. 



Geranium columbinum, L. Hedge-bank in lane near Colemore, 

 near EUesmere Town, Salop, v.-c. 40, July 3, 1912. — C. Waterfall. 

 " Yes."— G. C. Druce. 



Geranium Robertianum, L. Seedlings. Cult., Walton, S. Lanes., 

 Aug. 1912. — J. A. Wheldon. 



Geranium Robertianum, L., var. Chesil Beach, v.-c. 9, July 17, 

 1912. In compact roundish plants growing from a translucent yellow- 

 brown tap root. Flowers small, anthers red, pollen golden. Plant 

 hairy. — H. J. Riddelsdell. "The specimens lack properly dried 

 flowers. It would appear to be a form of the aggregate purpureum, 

 since the carpels are glabrous, but with more distant ridges than 

 those of Mr. White's plant. It is probably the var. minutiflorum 

 (Jord. Pugill. 39), since it is too hairy for litorale, and too compact 

 for i7itricatum, Gren." — G. C. Druce. 



