491 
R.  fuscus  Wh.  &  N.  Hedge,  Failand,  N.  Somerset, 
v.c.  6,  July  10,  1914 _ Ida  M.  Roper.  Yes. — W.M.R. 
R.  glareosus  Rogers  &  Marshall.  Dense  thicket  on 
sandy  soil,  Hesworth  Common,  Fittleworth,  W.  Sussex, 
v.c.  13,  July  22,  1914 _ Coll.  F.  A.  Rogers  &  W.  Moyle 
Rogers.  Mostly  very  strong,  hut  certainly  not  distinct 
from  the  much  weaker  Tilford  and  Hindhead  (Surrey) 
examples  of  the  species  which  I  distributed  through 
the  Watson  B.E.C.  in  1912-1913 _ W.M.R. 
R.  foliosus  Wh.  &  N.  Holmbush,  St.  Leonard’s 
Forest,  W.  Sussex,  v.c.  13,  Aug.  18,  1902. — J.  W.  White. 
This  may  be  R.  foliosus,  hut  the  specimen  is  too  imperfect 
to  enable  me  to  say  so  with  certainty. — W.M.R. 
R.  Marshalli  Focke  &  Rogers.  Roadside,  Bedham  to 
Fittleworth,  W.  Sussex,  v.c.  13,  July  25,  1914. — Coll.  F.  A. 
Rogers.  Comm.  W.  Moyle  Rogers. 
R.  Durotrigum  R.  P.  Mult.  Roadside  thickets  at 
intervals,  Bedham  to  Fittleworth,  W.  Sussex,  v.c.  13,  July 
18-25,  1914 _ Coll.  W.  Moyle  Rogers  &  F.  A.  Rogers.  In 
the  Sussex  Durotrigum  the  large  leaves  are  frequently 
and  perhaps  usually  less  deeply  incised  than  in  most 
of  the  Dorset  examples,  but  the  toothing  is  very  irregular 
and  often  considerably  compound.  There  seems  no  room 
for  question  as  to  identity _ W.M.R. 
R.  [du metorurfi  Wh .  &N.] .  Lane,  Failand,  N.  Somerset, 
v.c.  6,  Aug.  19,  1914 _ Ida  M.  Roper.  I  think  most 
probably  a  caesian  hybrid : — either  R.  caesius  x  rusti- 
canus,  or  R.  corylifolius  x  rusticanus.  —  W.M.R. 
R.  dumetorum  Wh.  &  N.,  var.  pilosus  Wh.  &  N.  ? 
Field  hedge  near  Pensford,  N.  Somerset,  v.c.  6,  Aug.  20, 
1914.  I  send  these  sheets  without  feeling  confident  that 
the  plant  is  correctly  named,  or  indeed  that  it  belongs  to 
the  aggregate  at  all.  It  seems  almost  too  caesian  for  a 
dumetorum  form. — J.  W.  White.  I  agree  with  Mr.  White’s 
remarks,  but  can  give  no  definite  name.  Among  dume¬ 
torum  forms  it  seems  nearest  to  var.  raduliformis ,  but  is 
still  more  caesian-looking  than  that. — W.M.R. 
R.  Balfourianus  Blox.  Tower’s  Walk,  Lindfield, 
Sussex,  v.c.  14,  June  26,  1914 — R.  S.  Standen.  Yes;  very 
characteristic  R.  Balfourianus  Blox. — W.M.R. 
