368 
Festuca  rubra  L.,  yar.  grandiflora  Hackel,  /.  littoralis 
Hackel.  Salt-marsh,  Wells,  Norfolk,  v.c.  28,  July,  1911. 
Named  as  above  by  Prof.  Hackel,  to  whom  specimens 
were  forwarded  by  Mr.  Arthur  Bennett  in  1887,  when  I 
first  found  the  plant _ P.  Long. 
Bromus  secalinus  L.,  var.  velutinus  (Schrad.).  Edmond- 
sham,  Dorset,  v.c.  9,  July,  1911 _ E.  F.  Linton.  Yes;  B. 
velutinus  bchrader  [1806]  =  B.  secalinus ,  ft  velutinus 
Koch  [1887] .  Asch.  and  Graebn.  (“  Synopsis,”  Bd.  II., 
Abth.  1,  pp.  604  5)  place  this  under  their  §  II.  multiflorus 
( B •  multiflorus  Sm.  [1800] ),  of  which  a  grossus  (B.  grossus 
Desf.  [1805] ,  not  of  DC.,  which  is  velutinus ),  with  smooth 
or  rough  glumes,  is  made  the  type — E.S.M.  B.  secalinus 
L.,  var.  ft  velutinus  Koch  Syn.  FI.  Germ,  et  Helv.,  p.  945 
(1844)  =  ft  velutinus  Schrader,  FI.  Germ.  I.  349  (1806),  = 
ft  multiflorus  Sm.  FI.  Brit.  I.,  126  (1800),  so  it  seems  to  me 
Hm  correct  name  is  B.  secalinus  L.,  ft  multiflorus  (Sm.) _ 
Azolla  [filiculoides  Lam.  Botanique  (Encycl.  meth.), 
I.,  343  (1783)].  From  a  dyke  near  Horning  Ferry,  E. 
Norfolk,  v.c.  27,  Sept.,  1911.  I  find  that  I  was  mistaken 
in  naming  the  Azolla  I  sent  as  filiculoides.  I  have  recently 
sent  some  fresh  specimens  from  the  dyke  to  Kew,  and 
they  have  reported  it  as  A.  caroliniana  Willd _ F.  Long. 
Lycopodium  annotinum  L.  Locally  abundant  on 
heathy  moorland,  about  two  miles  south-egist  of  Dal- 
whinnie,  E.  Inverness,  v.c.  96,  at  1700  feet,  July  20,  1911. 
Not  observed  elsewhere  in  the  district ;  I  had  never  before 
seen  it  growing  so  low  down,  as  it  usually  occurs  above 
2500  feet — Edward  S.  Marshall. 
Isoetes  lacustris  L.,  forma  longifolia  strictior  Caspary 
(Ref.  No.  3662).  Lough  Camelaun,  near  Cloghane,  S. 
Kerry,  June  17,  1911.  Named  by  Mr.  Arthur  Bennett, 
who  has  similar  examples  from  Aber  Lake,  Carnarvonshire. 
It  grew  in  about  two  to  four  feet  of  water,  and  was  fairly 
uniform  in  habit.  Prof.  H.  Gluck,  of  Heidelberg,  told  me 
that  the  Lough  Bray  var.  maxima  Blytt  ( Morei  Syme) 
was  much  reduced  in  size,  last  year,  and  much  resembled 
this ;  but  Mr.  Bennett  writes  that  my  plant  is  stouter 
