200 
Calaviintha  grandiflora  Moench.  ( ==  C.  sylvatica 
Bromf.).  Origin,  Apes  Down,  I.  of  Wight  ;  cult.  Edmond- 
sham,  Dorset,  Aug.  1908. — E.  F.  Linton. 
Galeopsis  angustifolia  Ehrh.,  var.  canescens  (Schultz.)  ? 
Crimscote  Downs,  near  Newbold-on- Stour,  Worcs.,  v.c. 
87,  Aug.  18,  1906. — C.  H.  Waddell.  Yes;  very  good. — 
E.S.M.  J  S 
Plantago  Coronopus  L.,  var.  pygmcea  Lange.  Sea- 
brook,  E.  Kent,  v.c.  15,  July  15,  1907 _ F.  L.  Foord-Kelcey. 
In  all  the  specimens  of  var.  pygmcea  which  I  have  seen 
the  leaves  are  much  more  slender  and  decumbent ;  this 
is  a  small  form,  but  hardly  Lange’s  variety _ E.S.M.  The 
species,  not  the  variety,  which  is  a  much  more  slender¬ 
leaved  plant _ E.F.L. 
Herniaria - .  Lizard  Point,  W.  Cornwall,  v.c. 
1,  Sept.  2,  1908 — Coll.  Mrs.  Ness.  Comm.  I.  M.  Hayward. 
H.  ciliata  Bab _ E.S.M. 
Scleranthus  annuus  L .,  var.  biennis  (Reuter).  Corn- 
held,  Fowey,  E.  Cornwall,  v.c.  2,  June  25,  1908._Coll.  Mrs. 
Graham.  Comm.  R.  S.  Standen.  No;  biennis  is  a  small, 
compact  plant.  This  is  the  usual  lax  form  of  loose  sand 
or  cultivated  ground.— E.S.M.  S.  annuus  L.,  not  var. 
biennis ,  whatever  the  relation  between  these  two  forms 
is — E.F.L. 
Salicornia - .  Marsh  near  the  Naze,  N.  Essex, 
v.c.  19,  Oct.  8,  1908.— Coll.  R.  H.  Goode.  Comm.  G.  Goode. 
I  should  have  called  this  S.  stricta  Dum.  It  does  not 
seem  at  all  reddish.— C.E.S.  This  plant  (or  if  there  are 
two  forms  on  my  sheet,  the  one  with  stout  long  spikes)  is 
the  same  as  a  frequent  S.  Hants,  plant  which  I  have 
gathered  at  Milford,  etc.,  and  which  the  Rev.  E.  S. 
Marshall  issued  as  S.  stricta  Dum.,  No.  2514,  from  Hayling 
Id.  (confirmed  by  Mr.  Ar.  Bennett)  and  No.  2593  from 
W.  Sussex.  I  have  it  too  from  Newquay  with  stem  half- 
procumbent  as  in  the  Essex  specimens.  I  have  looked 
on  these  as  S.  stricta  Dum.,  but  I  do  not  class  with  them 
Mr.  Marshall’s  Romney  Sand  (No.  1082)  plant,  which  appears 
to  me  to  be  young  S.  ramosissima  Woods,  and  is  perhaps 
the  same  as  the  New  Romney  S.  ramosissima  in  the 
“  Flora  of  Kent.’  —E.F.L.  Excellent  S.  stricta  Dum. _ 
E.S.M. 
