27 
hairs having been seen. The main stem has been grazed in 
four of my six plants. — W. H. Pearsall. A mixture of glabrous, 
hairy and glandular plants, all nibbled. Probably hybrids of 
E. brevipila and£. curta. — H. W. Pugsley. 
Euphrasia . [809]. Covesea, Morayshire, Sept., 
1929. — Leg. K. D. Little. Comm. J. E. Little. Some of 
these specimens are hirsute and glandular, others hirsute 
only. I think they are of hybrid origin, E. brevipila X curta. 
— H. W. Pugsley. 
Euphrasia . [1292], Foot of Buckland Hills, Surrey, 
Aug. 5, 1929. — E. C. Wallace. Rather unusual E. nemorosa. 
Foliage glabrous, with smooth and polished surfaces and re- 
markably plicate below ; teeth very long and acute.— W. H. 
Pearsall. Stout, dwarf E. nemorosa var. ciliata. — E. Drabble. 
A form of E. nemorosa Lohr. — H. W. Pugsley. 
Euphrasia latifolia Pursh ex Wettst. (No. 458). Cam Creag, 
Perthshire, July 29, 1929, and (No. 460), Craig-na-lochan, 
Perthshire, Aug. 1, 1929. These examples agree with Scandi- 
navian material of E. latifolia and are allied to E. foulaensis 
Towns. The Cam Creag specimens are too young to show well 
the characteristic large, deeply notched capsules, but a fruiting 
plant has been included on each sheet. The distribution of the 
Eyebrights on the north side of Loch Tay is interesting. On 
the lower mountain slopes a conspicuous, white-flowered 
variety of E. brevipila is abundant, and especially where the 
ground is heathery, E. micrantha Rchb. (= E. gracilis Fr.) also 
occurs. In the bogs up to about 2000' altitude E. scotica is 
generally plentiful, and on reaching the higher rocks, one meets 
with E. latifolia, which ascends nearly to the summit of Ben 
Lawers. As might be expected, E. latifolia is a late-flowering 
species in Scotland. — H. W. Pugsley. Yes, E. latifolia, 
eglandular and with very scanty clothing of any sort. — W. H. 
Pearsall. 
Euphrasia anglica Pugsl. (No. 462). Box Hill, Surrey, Sept. 
15, 1928. This is the plant of which a preliminary diagnosis 
has been printed in Journ. Bot. LXVII, 225 (1929). The 
material distributed is not entirely satisfactory owing to the 
dry season, but each sheet has been made as representative 
as possible. — H. W. Pugsley. 
Euphrasia [831]. Ebernoe, W. Sussex, Aug. 25, 1929. 
— J. E. Little. Starved E. anglica Pugsl. — H. W. Puglsey. 
