30 
in Warwickshire. It was too late for me to gather it in good con- 
dition.” — J. Bagnall. 
Carex limosa , Linn. “From wet pools in Primside Bog, Rox- 
burgh, June, 1875. The same form grows also in Lurgie Loch, Ber- 
wickshire.” — A. Brotherston. 
Carex punctata , Gaud. “Cliff by Bigbury Bay, S. Devon, 
July and August, 1875.” Grows rather sparingly on some low rocks 
under a cliff, where it is probably not unfrequently dashed with spray 
from the waves. It occurs mostly intermixed with coarse grassy 
vegetation, and Carex externa may be seen near it. The locality is 
just four degrees west longitude. — T. R. A. B. 
Carex Jiliformis, Linn. “ Primside Bog, Roxburgh ; Lurgie Loch, 
Berwick ; Campfield Bog, Northumberland, June, 1875. I send ex- 
amples of this from three counties. It is abundant in all the stations.” 
— A. Brotherston. 
Anthoxanthum Puelii, Lee. & Lam. “ Oatfields above Bigbury 
Bay (near Lambside), S. Devon, July and August, 1875. ^See Journ. 
Bot., Yol. iv., n.s., p. 297.)” — T. R. A. B. It is certainly small 
Puelii , not the A. Zloydik of Jordan, which has the uppermost leaf 
close to the panicle. — J. T. Boswell. 
Psamma baltica, R. & S. “Ross Links, Northumberland, 
August, 1875.” — War. Richardson; also sent by Mr. Brotherston, 
who observes : “ If last season may be taken as an average one, it 
will be some time ere every botanist in the country gets an example 
of this plant. When I visited the station in August last I saw plenty 
of plants, but very few of them were flowering. The common species 
was the same in that respect. When seen growing together P. 
baltica is easily distinguished by the leaf ; it is much broader and 
flatter than in P. arenaria, and the grass is altogether a stronger- 
growing plant.” 
Poa compressa, Linn. “ Heskyn, Tiddy Valley, E. Cornwall, 
July, 1875.” I have seen this grass in two places only in the county 
of Cornwall. — T. R. A. B. 
Poa sudetica , Haenke. “Leek Wotton, Warwickshire, June, 
1875.” — R. L. Baker. Sent thence also by Mr. Bromwich, who 
says: “Growing in great abundance in a portion of an old wood at 
Leek Wotton, covering about half an acre. The spot is about two 
and a half miles from where I first found it, some sixteen or seventeen 
years ago, and pointed it out to Mr. Kirk. It is now nearly extinct 
at Kenilworth.” “ Wood near Kelso, Roxburgh, June, 1875. (See 
Rep. B. E. C., 1872-74, p. 45.)” — A. Brotherston. 
Bromus Benekenii , Lange. “ Downhill, Glen Devon, Perth, Sep- 
