8 
F.  pavviflova ,  Lam.  Turnip  field,  under  Badbury  Down, 
Dorset,  v.c.  9,  23  Sept.,  1904.—  E.  S.  Gregory  and  R.  P. 
Murray.  Correct :  vide  J1  of  Bot.,  April,  1905. — H.W.P. 
Bavbavea  pvcecox,  R.  Br.  Ponsanooth,  W.  Cornwall, 
v.c.  1,  4  May,  1903. — F.  H.  Davey.  This  is  very  young  and 
shows  no  seed  pods  in  the  specimen  I  have.  The  flowers, 
root,  stem  leaves,  etc,  point  to  B.  intermedia ,  Bor.  rather  than 
pvczcox ,  which  has  usually  larger  flowers  and  differently  cut 
leaves. — C.E.S. 
Cavdamine  amava ,  L.,  var.  evubescens ,  Petermann.  This 
plant  was  found  on  May  15,  1905,  growing  in  abundance 
between  Black  Boy  Wharf  and  New  Head  Bridge,  on  the 
Canal,  Addlestone,  N.W.  Surrey.  It  differs  chiefly  from 
the  type  in  its  small  flowers,  the  petals  of  which  are  distinctly 
tipped  with  pink,  so  that  it  is  probably  the  same  as  the  var. 
Opicii  Presl.  forma  lilacina  Beck  (FI.  Nied.  Oestr.  II,  1 
page  453)-  Otto  E.  Schulz,  the  author  of  the  Monograph  of 
the  genus  Cavdamine  in  Engl.  Jahrb.  XXXII  (1903),  p.  501, 
who  has  seen  a  specimen,  calls  it  “C.  amava ,  L.,  var.  evubescens , 
Petermann,  or  more  exactly  C.  amava ,  L.,  var.  subglabva  Schur., 
sub-var.  evubescens ,  Petermann,”  and  he  thinks  it  the  first 
British  record  though  there  is  said  to  be  a  very  similar  plant 
in  Herb.  Brit.  Mus.  from  Lodsworth,  Sussex  (Rev.  E.  S. 
Marshall),  named  C.  amava ,  the  flowers  of  which,  however, 
are  less  coloured  than  in  the  Surrey  Plant.  In  Bot.  Exch! 
Club  Rept.  for  1888,  p.  200,  Mr.  Druce  has  a  note  on  a  pink 
flowered  form  of  C.  amava  from  Heyford,  Oxon.,  and  in  his 
Flora  of  Oxfordshire,  p.  28,  is  noted  a  hybrid  C.  amava  x 
pvatensis  growing  at  the  same  place,  “the  flowers  darker  in 
colour  than  pvatensis,  having  more  of  a  purplish  tint,  but 
slightly  smaller  than  amava :  the  anthers  violet  as  in  amava 
but  the  style  nearer  that  of  pvatensis.  There  appears  to  be 
no  reference  to  this  hybrid  in  the  European  Floras.”  Miss 
Katherine  Fitzgerald,  who  discovered  the  plant  in  Surrey 
and  submitted  specimens  to  Kew,  says  that  “the  plant 
nearest  the  water  is  quite  white,  the  pale  lilac  being  found 
some  feet  from  the  water  and  in  less  abundance.”  This  note 
is  published  here  on  the  suggestion  of  Mr.  W.  B.  Hemsley, 
F.R.S.,  Keeper  of  the  Kew  Herbarium,  from  information 
supplied  by  Mr.  H.  S.  Thompson,  F.L.S. — G.G. 
Dvaba  aizoides ,  L.  (1)  Penard  Castle,  near  Swansea, 
Glamorgan,  v.c.  41,  24  March,  1904.— F.  L.  Foord-Kelcey. 
(2)  Cliffs,  w.  of  Pwll-du  Head,  Gower,  Glamorgan,  v.c.  41, 
12  April,  1904.— E.  S.  Marshall.  A  fine  set:  in  excellent 
fruit. — W.B. 
