456 
C.  rubrum  L.,  var.  blitoides  Wallr.  Brickfield  at  E. 
Grinstead,  E.  Sussex,  v.c.  14,  Aug.,  1912. — Coll.  Phyllis 
Stockdale.  Comm.  R.  S.  Standen.  This  plant,  with  its 
long  strict  spikelets  and  acutely-toothed  leaves  may  well 
be  var.  blitoides.  One  of  its  described  characters, 
leaves  acuminate”  is,  howrever,  not  very  evident  on  my 
specimen,  and  the  fruit  should  be  blood-red  or  purple  at 
maturity. — C.E.S.  Yes,  a  rather  small  form  of  the 
variety. — C.E.M. 
Salicovjiici  [ stricta  Dum.] .  Thorney  Island,  W.  Sussex, 
v.c.  18,  Oct.  15,  1913.— R.  S.  Standen.  The  two  specimens 
I  have  examined  are  very  good  examples  of  the  more 
branched  form  of  S.  ramosissinici  in  the  fruiting  state. 
—C.E.M. 
S.  pusilla  Woods,  var.  gracillima  Towns.  Thorney 
Island,  W.  Sussex,  v.c.  18,  Oct.  15,  1913. — R.  S.  Standen. 
This  seems  to  be  Townsend’s  plant.  S.  pusilla  Woods 
is  a  critical  and  little  understood  plant,  but  seems  to  me 
nearer  S.  lierbacea  than  S.  gracillima.  The  latter  is, 
in  its  anatomical  features,  allied  to  S.  disarticulata ;  and 
it  is  a  tenable  view  that  <S.  gracillima  is  a  hybrid  of 
S.  disarticulata  and  S.  ramosissima. — C.E.M. 
S.  [i appressa  Dum.] .  Thorney  Island,  W.  Sussex,  v.c. 
13,  Oct.  15,  1913. — R.  S.  Standen.  My  two  specimens  are 
not  very  characteristic,  as  they  do  not  show  the  usual 
triangular-fanshaped  outline ;  but  I  have  seen  the  species 
there  in  good  quantity. — E.S.M.  Of  the  three  specimens 
before  me,  two  are  S.  prostrata ,  var.  smithiana  Moss  and 
Salisbury  (=  S.  smithiana  Moss  =  S.  procumbens  auct. 
angl.  olim  non  Smith),  and  the  third  is  perhaps  a  hybrid 
whose  parentage  could  better  be  determined  at  the  time 
of  collecting  than  from  a  dried  specimen. — C.E.M. 
S.  lignosa  Woods.  Portchester,  S.  Hants.,  v.c.  11, 
Oct.  15,  1913. — R.  S.  Standen.  S.  pere?mis,  var.  lignosa 
Moss  (=  S.  lignosa  Woods).  The  specimen  before  me  is 
a  splendid  example  of  this. — C.E.M. 
Suceda  maritima  Dum.,  var.  procumbens  Syme.  Salt- 
marsh,  Wells,  W.  Norfolk,  v.c.  28,  Aug.,  1912.— F.  Long. 
Yes;  a  small  form  of  this  slight  variety. — E.S.M. 
