278 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OP THE BRITISH ISLES. 



Teucrium Botrys, L. Near Sapperton, v.-c. 33, Sep. 1912. Coll., 

 W. J. Greenwood. See Journ. Bot. 1912, p. 315. — H. J. Riddels- 

 dell. 



Ajuga Chamaepitys, Schreb. Cultivated ground, near High Down, 

 Hitchin, Herts, Sep. 20, 1912. The scent of pine -oil is very noticeable 

 in the fresh plant. In another locality, near Hitchin, the plants were 

 very much smaller, and only occasionally branched. — J. E. Little. 



Plantago Coronopus, L., var % [Ref. No. 4.] Sandy bank, St 

 Osyth Marshes, Essex N., June 25, 1912. Sandy bank dividing two 

 marshes, quite unmixed with the type which occurs abundantly on 

 sandy soil near by, and on other parts of the bank. The greatly 

 enlarged sepals can hardly be the effect of insect infestation, as there 

 was no mixture with the type in this patch, although I noticed a few 

 stray plants of the variety some yards away. — G. C. Brown. "I think 

 it is a monstrous condition, perhaps due to a gall. I have asked 

 Prof. Trail's opinion. He says it is due to a mite, Eriophyes barroisii, 

 Focken."— G. C. Druce. 



Plantago maritima, L., narrow-leaved form. Beach, Newquay, 

 West Cornwall, v.-c. 1, Sept. 1912.— C. C. Vigurs. 



Plantago kmceolata, L. Waste ground, Askham, v.-c. 69, Aug. 9, 

 1912. Is this gall-influence, viviparity, monstrosity, or whaf? — 

 D. LUMB. 



Plantago major, L., var. intermedia, Gilib. [Ref. No. 760.] 

 Pasture, Merton parish, Surrey, July 20, 1912. — C. E. Britton. 



Sderanthus annuus, L., dwarf form. Wall top, Haverthwaite, 

 N. Lanes, v.-c. 69, Sept. 1912. —J. Comber. "Var. hihernus, 

 Reichb. =k hie^mis. Renter." — E. S. Marshall. "The situation 

 may account for this pretty, condensed state of annuus.^' — C. E. 

 Salmon. 



Sderanthus annuus, L., var, hihernus, Reichb. (>S'. biennis, Renter.) 

 [Ref. No. 650.] Among turf, Ripley Green, Surrey, June 2, 1912. — 

 C. E. Britton. "I think this Surrey form which I have collected 

 with Lady Davy to be a distinct variety, but I have not yet been 

 able to match it." — G. C. Druce. "This is interesting. I admit the 

 calyx segments of fruit are shorter than those in Mr Comber's plant, 

 but I think this should perhaps be left under type. All my examples 

 of this variety have a different habit with extremely short internodes, 

 and even shorter calyx teeth." — C. E. Salmon. " This seems to me 

 to be the type rather than the variety ; the root is apparently 



