242 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OP THE BRITISH ISLES. 



does not seem sufficiently so for* the var. glandulosum, Bosch. The 

 small plant from Ainsdale may possibly be referred to it, as might 

 Mr Barton's plant from Lihou Island. Those from Headon Hill 

 and the Grand Mare are less glandular. — G. C. Druce. 



Er odium cicutarium, L'Herit., var. pimpinellifolium (Sibth.) as 

 a species. [Ref. No. 4819.] Stow Wood, Oxon, Aug. 1912. In 

 some of the specimens the two upper petals had dark purple spots 

 as in Sibthorp's type, which came from the vicinity. He based it 

 on the Gera7iium 'pim'pinellaefolio^ Ray 8yn., 358, 1724. The petals 

 were sometimes unspotted, even on the same plant. — G. C. Druce. 

 " From the colour of the stigmas and the glandular sepals, I should 

 consider Mr Druce's plant to be E. praetermissum, J ord. The carpel 

 furrow of E. triviale is said in Bah. Manual to be ' very faint,' and 

 in Corbiere's Fl. Frayice to be 'very marked.' There seems to be 

 much confusion in naming these plants. According to Corbiere, 

 E. triviale, Jord., includes E. pallidiflorum, E. Boraeanum, and 

 E. parvijlorum, and has an eglandular calyx and marked carpel 

 furrow. E. praetermissum differs chiefly in its glandular calyx and 

 purple-violet stigmas." — J. A. Wheldon. 



Erodium moschatum, L'Herit., var. TRef, No. 38.] Sandy coast, 

 Grand Havre, Guernsey, Aug. 21, 1912. This dwarf plant is 

 common on the west coast from Grand Havre southwards to Leree. 

 Mr Marquand told me that so far as he knew it had been passed over 

 as Erodium cicutarium, of which I send dwarf plants from the same 

 locality. The petals were exactly similar to those of the normal full- 

 sized plant growing at Albecq. My Guernsey specimens of Erodium 

 moschatum do not bear out Babington's (Manual) distinction 

 E. cicutarium, ' beak hairy ' ; E. moschatum, ' beak downy. ' 

 I have found both hairy with little difference. I have not seen an 

 authentic specimen of var. minor, Rouy and Fouc, but my No. 38 

 agrees well with their description, and seems probable from the 

 habitat. In Herh. Brit. Mus. is a similar plant collected by Mr 

 Marshall, [No. 2924.] April 1, 1905, on limestone rocks, Purn Hill, 

 Bleadon. He remarks ' very glandular, not musk-scented, stamens 

 (apparently) not bidentate at base.' — W. C. Barton. " Agrees very 

 well (by description) with var. minor, Rouy, Fl. de France, iv. 113." — 

 E. S. Marshall. " Possibly the var. minor, Rouy and Fouc, Fl. Fr., 

 iv. 113."— G. C. Druce. 



Erodium maritimum, L'Herit. North coast, Guernsey, Aug. 8, 

 1912. Also a seedling plant, coast near Mont Cuet, Guernsey, 

 Aug. 10, 1912.— W. C. Barton. " Yes."— G. C. Druce. 



Impatiens Noli-tangere, L. Marrington Dingle, v.-c, 40, July 24, 

 1912. Coll. Rev. W. Butt, President of the Cotteswold Club. A 



