PLANT NOTES FOR 1913, ETC. 



315 



465. T. cordata ( T. ulmifolia ). Branchlets glabrous, or nearly 

 so. Leaves small, glabrous except for axil-tufts, bluish beneath with 

 irregular and not prominent tertiary venation. Buds with two 

 external scales. Cymes erect, five to seven-flowered. Fruit faintly 

 ridged ; shell thin and fragile. 



464. T. europaea (T. vulgaris). Branchlets quite glabrous. 

 Leaves larger than those of T. cordata ; under surface pale green^ 

 glabrous except for axil-tufts, and a few hairs on the nerves, with 

 parallel straight and prominent tertiary venation as in platyphyllos. 

 Buds with three external scales. Cymes pendulous, five to ten- 

 flowered. Fruit faintly ribbed ; shell woody and hard. 



491. Erodium malachoides Willd., var. ribifolium DC. 

 Alien, Europe. Galashiels, Selkirk, 1913, Miss Ida M. Hayward. 



493 (2). Erodium Chium Willdenow, Phyt. 10. Alien, Eur. 

 mer. Galashiels, Selkirk, 1913, Miss Ida M. Hayward. Det. A. 

 Thellung. 



Gen. 129 (2). Negundo Moench Meth. 334, 1794. 

 524 (4). IS". Aceroides Moench, = Acer Negundo L. Alien, 

 N. America. A tree 20 feet high occurs in a hedge away from houses 

 near Tenbury, 1913. Mrs I. Adams, F.L.S., vide spec. 



579 e. Medicago hispida Gaertn., var. confinis (Koch) Burnat. 

 Ipswich, Suffolk, July 1913, G. C. Druce. 



644 (2). Lotus siliquosus L. = Tetragouolobus siliquosus 

 Roth. Alien. Europe. Forest Farm, 7 miles west of Winchester, 

 1875, Warner, in Fl. Hampshire, 115. Still occurs near Winchester, 

 P. Hall, in lit. Well established at Streatley, Berks, for the last 

 two years, V. C. Murray, in lit. 



655 (2). Astragalus Cicer L. Alien, Europe. Culzean, 

 Ayrshire, 1913. A. W^ebster, vide spec. A handsome species 

 allied to but extremely different from A. danicus, having large yellow 

 flowers and pods, clothed with long black hairs. 



697. Yicia sativa L., sub-species obovata (Seringe) Gaudin 

 in Fl. Helv. iv., 510, 1829, = notata (Gilib.) Asch. & Graebn. 

 " Foliolis villosis obovato-cuneatis, obcordatis vel late retusis 



