45 
Carex eu-ftava , var. a. genuina , Syme. “ • Cybel. Brit.,’ prov. xii., 
sub-prov., county 69. Ditch, Hazelslack, Arnsidc Moss, Westmore- 
land.” — Charles Bailet, July 7th, 1874. 
Carex involuta. “ Mainly sent because this new station extends the 
range of this local Carex some eight miles south (with a touch of west) 
from Hale Moss. I am told that the sedge grows rather finer thap in 
that original station.” — J. Warren. “I hope I am right in assigning 
this note of Mr. Warren’s to C. involuta , but it had no name written 
at the top of the paper. It is earnestly requested that any member 
sending any note about a plant, will begin it with the name of the 
plant and the locality where it was found.” — John T. Boswell. 
Digitaria sanguinalis, Scop. “ Kelso, Roxburghshire, Sept., 1874. 
Stragglers only on cultivated ground.” — A. Brotherston. 
Phalaris paradoxa, Linn. “Cultivated fields, Swanage, Dorset- 
shire, July, 1874.” — T. B. Flower. “ Supposed to have been intro- 
duced in the soil of some orange trees. It grows nowhere else in 
England. Growing in great abundance in a wheat-field, and on the 
roadside beyond.” — Eleanor Otte, Swanage, Dorset, August 9, 1872. 
Apera interrupta, Beauv. “ The specimens were gathered in fields 
near Dirleton, Haddingtonshire, on the 3rd of July, 1872, where it 
was growing in very great quantity. It might readily be thought in- 
digenous, but the locality is one where plants seem to establish them- 
selves when introduced with corn seeds. At all events it has been 
settled there for some years.” — J. It. Drummond. 
Agrostis setacea, Curtis. “ A few specimens collected from con- 
siderably over 1000 ft. on Dartmoor.” — T. R. Archer Briggs. 
Psamma baltica , Roem. & Sch. “ Ross links, Northumberland, 
August, 1872.” — William Richardson and P. W. Maclagan. In a 
note dated 6 th August, 1872, Dr. Maclagan writes: — “Under the 
guidance of Mr. Richardson I went to-day to Ross sands, and got the 
Psamma baltica. There can be no question of its being truly native, 
extending at intervals along the links for at least three miles.” 
Calamagrostis Hooheri , “ E. Bot.,” iii. “ Gravelly shore, Scawdey 
Island, Lough Neagh, Co. Tyrone.” — S. A. Stewart, June 6, 1870. 
Melica uniflora, Retz. “ Auchtertool Linn, Fife, July, 1874.” — J. 
T. Boswell. 
Poa sudetica , Haenke. “ Woods near Kelso, 1874. To all appearance 
this is wild in many of the woods, both in Roxburgh and Berwick 
shires.” — A. Brotherston. 
Cynosurus echinatus. “Common on the Hartlepool ballast, and 
becoming so in many fields around. In 1872 I noticed it as far as 
four miles from the town, in fields.” — F. Arnold Lees, 1873. 
