398 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 



2888. Asplenium septentrionale Hoffm. 4 plants seen in 

 Lanes. N., 69 b, W. H. Pearsall, in lit. It is queried for Westmor- 

 land in Top. Bot. It has occurred (\ as an alien) on a wall at Rowal- 

 lane, Co. Down, Irish Nat. 154, 1912. 



2892. Polystichum angulare Presl, var. Braunii (Spenn.). 

 My valued correspondent Dr H. Woynar of Graz tells me that the 

 plates 47 and 62 in Step's Wayside and Woodland Ferns represent 

 the above plant, which Dr Woynar says is a true species, distinguished, 

 inter alia, from angulare and aculeatum by the shape of the frond, 

 the lower pinnae narrowing, gradually becoming shorter, thus giving 

 an elliptic appearance. It was first found in Britain by our late 

 member, the Rev. W. H. Painter, near Bristol in Somersetshire. Mr 

 Step kindly tells me that the photographs for the plates referred to 

 were obtained from plants not growing in a native state, but from the 

 Rock Garden at Kew. 



2906. Cystopteris fragilis Bernh. Marlborough, Wilts, 1912, 

 J. G. Everitt, in lit. 



2917. Hymenophyllum peltatum Desv. Conway gorge, Den- 

 bigh, Dallman in Journ. Bot. Suppl. 41, 1913. 



2923 (2) Azolla filiculoides Lam. Sulham, Berks; Nune- 

 ham, Oxon, G. C. Druce ; Cambridge, Dr Moss, in lit. 



2932. Selaginella Selaginoides Gray. Denbigh, Dallman in 

 Journ. Bot. Suppl. 43, 1913. 



CORRECTIONS, ETC. 

 Lythrum Hyssopifolia L. See Report 221, 1912. From New 

 Timber, Sussex. Having seen a painting of this plant in flower from 

 the above locality, I am obliged to refer it to L. Graefferi Ten., a 

 native of S. Europe. 



Utricularia Bremii Heer. See Report 215 and Journ. Bot. 

 316, 1912. The specimens sent me by Mr Lumb were named by me 

 U. minor, and Dr Gliick has so named the gathering made by Mr W. 

 H. Pearsall, so its record for this place must be deleted, unless indeed 

 both species occur. 



