382 
Papaver  Rhceas  L.,  var.  strigosum  (Boenn.).  Chyngton 
Road,  Seaford,  E.  Sussex,  v.c.  14,  June  14,  1912. — R.  S. 
Standen.  Yes,  the  plant  we  have  been  in  the  habit  of  so 
naming.  Some  say  this  is  the  hybrid  between  Rhceas  and 
dubium,  and  the  more  elongated  capsule — taken  with 
the  adpressed  hairs — support  this  view.  Mr.  Standen’s 
specimens  are  affected  with  mildew. — C.E.S.  My  specimen 
has  quite  the  appearance  of  a  hybrid  between  P.  dubium 
and  P.  Rhceas  ;  no  capsule  is  present ;  but  I  have  little 
doubt  about  its  being  that. — E.S.M. 
P.  Rhceas  L.,  var.  Pryorii  Druce.  Cornfield,  Avebury, 
N.  Wilts.,  v.c.  7,  June  9,  1912.  Here  and  there  among  the 
type,  but  easily  distinguished.  An  occasional  intermediate 
may  have  been  a  hybrid.  In  the  same  field  I  gathered  var. 
strigosum  and  the  white-flowered  form  of  the  type. — 
W.  C.  Barton.  No  doubt  the  plant  so  named,  but  not  very 
marked. — C.E.S.  Right. — E.S.M. 
Chelidonium  majus  L.,  var.  laciniatum  Mill.  Hedge- 
bank,  near  Ledbury,  Herefordsh.,  v.c.  36,  May  14,  1912. 
— S.  H.  Bickham. 
Fiomaria  Boraei  Jord.,  var.  britannica  Pngsley.  Vale, 
Guernsey,  Aug.  8,  1912.  Mr.  Pugsley  named  a  specimen 
of  this  gathering. — W.  C.  Barton.  My  material  is  too 
scanty  to  warrant  a  definite  opinion  ;  but  it  looks  right. — 
E.S.M. 
F.  Bastardi  Bor.  In  a  neglected  garden,  Trefriw, 
Carnarvonsh.,  v.c.  49,  July  8,  1912 — -S.  H.  Bickham  and 
E.  S.  Marshall.  Both  correct. — H.W.P. 
Nasturtium  officinale  R.  Br.,  var.  microphyllum 
(Reichb.).  Rockland  marshes,  E.  Norfolk,  v.c.  27,  June, 
1912. — F.  Long.  Yes,  my  sheet  is  quite  good  microphyllum, 
I  believe.  Reichenbach  says  (FI.  Germ,  excurs.,  p.  683,  1830 
— 32)  “  Habitus  gracilis  Card,  amarae ,  foliola  minora,  flores 
medium  tenent  inter  illius  et  Nasturtii  officinalis;  axillae 
absque  radiculis,  fructus  Nasturtii  brevis.  .  .  .”  Is  it  (with 
siifolium )  of  higher  standing  than  a  form  ?  Rouy  &  Foucaud 
remark  (FI.  Fr.)  “  On  rencontre  parfois,  sur  le  meme  pied , 
des  feuilles  des  var.  .  .  .  siifolium  et  genuinumP _ C.E.S. 
Just  what  I  have,  so  named  ;  but  I  look  upon  it  as  a  state , 
rather  than  a  real  variety. — E.S.M. 
