120 
of  an  early  record. — A.  B.  Jackson.  Rightly  named,  I 
believe. — E.S.M. 
Poa  glauca ,  Sm.  Ystolion  Duon,  Carnarvonsh.,  v.c. 
49,  Aug.  9,  1906.  Name  confirmed  by  Mr.  Marshall,  who 
thinks  the  specimens  somewhat  drawn- up  and  shade- 
grown.- — A.  H.  Wolley-Dod. 
P.  nemoralis,  L.,  var.  glaucantha ,  Reich.  Twll  Ddu, 
Carnarvonsh.,  v.c.  49,  Aug.  8,  1906.  Name  confirmed  by 
Rev.  E.  S.  Marshall,  who  tells  me  he  believes,  but  is  not 
sure,  that  it  is  synonymous  with  var.  ccesia,  Gaud. — A.  H. 
Wolley-Dod. 
P.  nemoralis ,  L.,  var.  Linn  of  Corriemulzie,  Braemar, 
S.  Aberdeensh.,  v.c.  92,  July  20,  1906.  Rather  glaucous. 
In  1886  Mr.  F.  J.  Hanbury  and  I  gathered  this  at  the 
same  spot ;  it  was  then  referred  to  var.  Parnellii,  but  I 
now  incline  to  think  it  a  weak,  shade-grown  state  of  var. 
divaricata,  Syme,  which  is  the  dominant  form  on  rocks 
by  streams,  in  that  district. — E.  S.  Marshall. 
Glyceria  plicata ,  Fr.,  var.  pedicellata  (Townsend). 
Scraptoft,  Leics.,  v.c.  56,  July  15,  1906. — A.  R.  Horwood. 
Correctly  named. — A.  Ley.  Yes ;  G.  fluitans  x  plicata. 
Always  sterile. — E.S.M. 
Agropyron  acutum,  R.  &  S.  Bosham  Creek,  W. 
Sussex,  v.c.  13,  Aug.  28,  1906. — R.  S.  Standen.  Form  of 
pungens  ? — S.H.  B.  Yes. — A.  Ley.  Yes;  A.  pungens, 
R.  &  S.  Our  British  A.  acutum  seems  to  be  mainly,  if 
not  entirely,  A.  junceum  x  repens  ( Triticum  laxum ,  Fr.). 
— E.S.M.  Yes,  P  littorale  Syme  in  “Eng.  Bot.”  XI.,  p. 
180  (1872).— A.B. 
Equisetum  Moorei,  Newman.  Hort.,  “  Underdown, ” 
Ledbury ;  (origin,  sea  coast,  Co.  Wicklow)  Sept.  1,  1906. — 
S.  H.  Bickham.  Your  Wicklow  Equisetum  is  greener  and 
more  slender  than  my  herb,  specimens  of  E.  Moorei ,  but 
it  agrees  better  on  the  whole  with  that  than  with  E. 
trachyodon. — E.S.M.  in  litt. 
E.  variegatum  Schleich.  Weston-super-Mare,  N. 
Somerset,  v.c.  6,  July  21,  1906.  This  has  been  recorded 
as  the  a.  arenarium ;  but  the  habit  is  quite  different  from 
that,  as  I  know  it  in  Scotland  ;  the  stems  being  crowded, 
