308 
C.  [rubrum  L.,  var.  pseudo-botryoides  Wats.] .  Damp 
places,  Ross  Links,  N.E.  Northumberland,  v.c.  68,  Aug. 
1884,  and  July  1886. — H.  PL  Fox.  My  specimens  (Aug. 
1884)  are  C.  glaucum.  L.,  and  not  C.  rubrum  L.,  var. 
pseudo-botryoides  WAts. — C.E.S.  Extremely  interesting; 
it  is  a  small  state  of  C.  glaucum  L.,  similar  to  plants  sent 
to  me  fresh  in  Sept.  1901  by  Mr.  E.  Ferguson  Shepherd 
from  damp  ground  on  Chobham  Common,  near  Windle- 
sham,  Surrey;  it  grew  there  in  profusion,  associated  with 
Littorella ,  Genticuna  Pneumonanthe ,  etc.,  and  appeared  to 
be  certainly  native.  I  should  suppose  it  to  be  equally  so 
in  Mr.  Fox  s  locality,  as  it  occurs  in  similar  situations  on 
the  Continent.  Distinguishable  at  a  glance  from  C. 
ruby um ,  var.  pseudo-botryoides  by  the  sinuate  foliage,  very 
mealy  beneath  ;  the  seeds  are  also  quite  different— E.S.M. 
Atriplex  deltoidea  Bab.,  var.  salina  Bab.  By  the  sea, 
Portquin,  near  Padstow,  E.  Cornwall,  v.c.  2,  Aug.  1910 _ 
H.  E.  Fox.  A  few  of  the  leaves  have  the  leaf-cusps 
decidedly  spreading  or  declining  and  so  the  naming  seems 
correct— A.  B. 
Salicornia  stricta  Dum.  Bosham  Creek,  W.  Sussex 
v.c.  18,  Sept.  27,  1910. — R.  S.  Standen.  S.  europcea  Pj. 
forma  stricta  Moss  (Jl.  of  Bot.,  1911,  p.  180).  — C.E.M. 
S.  ramosissima  Woods.  Mouth  of  the  Nene,  S.  Lines., 
v.c.  58,  Oct.  11,  1909.  A  very  variable  plant.  Some 
specimens  are  quite  unbranched. — C.  E.  Moss.  (See  also 
Rept.  B.E.C.,  1910,  p.  585). 
L?'  SP-  nov-  Holme  Salt  Marsh,  Hunstanton, 
W.  Norfolk,  v.c.  28,  Oct.  16,  1910.  Since  the  specimens 
were  sent  this  has  been  named  S.  disarticulata  Moss 
m  Jl.  of  Bot.,  p.  183,  t.  514  (1911).  I  consider  this  the 
most  remarkable  and  distinct  species  of  the  whole  genus. 
— C.  E.  Moss.  (See  also  Rept.  B.E.C.,  1910,  p.  586). 
S.  procumbens  Sm.  (Ref.  No.  3548).  On  damp  or 
dryish  mud,  about  a  quarter  of  a  mile  beyond  Minehead 
Pier,  towards  Greenaleigh,  S.  Somerset,  v.c.  5,  Oct.  3,  1910. 
Quite  prostrate,  stiff,  much  tinged  with  red  or  red-brown  ; 
spikes  short,  blunt.  The  specimens  are  a  good  deal 
smaller  than  those  of  another  gathering  which  grew  on 
dry  mud,  but  which  is  otherwise  indistinguishable.  I  have 
