S99 
A  broad-leaved  form  of  H.  umbellatum  which  has  no 
special  name _ E.F.L. 
Hypochceris  glabra  L.  (1)  Headon  Hill,  I.  of  Wight 
v.c.  10,  Sept.  1,  1912 — W.  C.  Barton.  This  is  var.  erostris 
Coss.  &  Germ.  FI.  Paris  (  —  var.  nana  Dunn,  Jl.  Bot.,  1896 
p.  476).— C.E.S.  (2)  Sandy  banks,  St.  Martha’s  Hill, 
Guildford,  Surrey,  v.c.  17,  June  1912— J.  Comber. 
H.  glabra  L.  [var.  nana ]  Dunn.  Lancresse  Common 
Guernsey,  July  81,  1912— W.C.  Barton.  The  central  fruits 
of  this  are  clearly  beaked,  so  it  cannot  be  placed  under  var 
nana  Dunn  ( =  erostris  C.  &  G.).  To  me  it  is  a  poor  starved 
state  of  the  type _ C.E.S. 
Leontodon  hispidum  L.,  [var.  hastile  L.] .  Little  Malvern 
Worcs.,  v.c.  37,  June  1912 — A.  J.  Crosfield.  The  variety  is 
described  in  “Bab.  Man.”  ed.  ix,  p.  226,  as  being  “almost 
glabious  throughout  ;  these  specimens  are  very  hairy _ 
E.S.M. 
L.  hispidum  L.,  var.  glabratum  Gren.  &  Godr. 
Meadow,  Malvern  Wells,  Worcs.,  v.c.  37,  June  15,  1912— 
Coll.  R.  F.  Towndrow.  Comm.  S.  H.  Bickham.  (See  Kept. 
B.E.C.,  1912,  p.  266).  F 
Lactuca  Serriola  L.  Waste  ground,  Newhaven  E 
Sussex,  v.c.  14,  Aug.  14,  1912— B.  S.  Standen.  Right— 
E.S.M. 
Trachelium  cceruleum  L.  Old  wall,  St.  Peter  Port 
Guernsey,  Aug.  4,  1912.  First  recorded  in  Jl.  of  Bot  ’ 
1892— W.  C.  Barton.  ’ 
Pyrola  rotundifolia  L .,  form  intermediate  between 
type  and  var.  arenaria.  Grande  Mare,  Guernsey,  Aug.  16, 
1912.  (See  Marquand’s  “Flora  of  Guernsey”  and  “Jl.  of  Bot.” 
Nov.  1893.)  It  is  unfortunate  that  the  habitat  of  this 
plant  is  being  rapidly  reduced.  Only  a  very  small  area  of 
La  Grande  Mare  is  still  undrained  ;  the  large  pools  have 
disappeared  and  a  few  years  will  probably  see  the  extinction 
of  the  marsh  plants  of  the  locality _ W.  C.  Barton.  The 
plant  received  differs  from  all  those  in  my  herbarium  by 
its  smaller  orbicular  foliage  and  more  numerous  flowers 
(twelve,  besides  what  looks  like  a  rudimentary  one  at  the 
apex) ;  the  fruit  is  also  appreciably  smaller.  Of  P.  serotina 
