also agree. The latter adds : I have seen this variety near 
Higham, Kent, in a station where it is almost certainly native. 
There is a very similar var. integrata Gren. and Godr. (FI. 
France, p. 320) which appears to differ by having longer leaves 
which are without spines on the mid-rib beneath, which might 
well occur in Britain also. — J. E. Lousley. 
Erica Tetralix L. Form with all the flowers replaced by 
sepaloid bracts. Near Moreton, Dorset, Sept. 9, 1932. — L. B. 
Hall. A few specimens of this plant were sent to the Club 
last year, but members would probably like to have more 
material. All specimens sent, last year and this, are from the 
same bush. Again this year all the heads were of the same 
peculiar form. The plant grows among the normal plants on 
an extensive heath. I have not been able to find more than 
this one plant with the modified heads. I have taken a 
piece of the root to my garden to test its response to varying 
conditions. — L. B. Hall. (See last Report). 
Pyrola rotundifolia L., var. maritima (Kenyon). Formby 
sand-hills, near Liverpool, Lancashire. Coll. A. 0. Hume, 
Sept. 14, 1905. Comm. S. Loud. Bot. Inst. Yes. — E. Drabble.. 
Correct. It has at least three varietal names. — J. Fraser. 
Limonium vulgar e Mill. (1) Salt marsh, Heacham, near 
Hunstanton, Norfolk, Aug. 7, 1932. (2) Salt marsh, Freiston 
Shore, near Boston, Lincolnshire, Aug. 14, 1932. — J. W. Carr. 
Limonium binervosum C. E. Salm. Salt marsh, Holrne- 
next-the-Sea, near Hunstanton, Norfolk, Aug. 21, 1932. A 
small form of this species. — J. W. Carr. 
Limonium bellidifolium Dum. Salt marsh, Holme-next- 
the-Sea, near Hunstanton, Norfolk West, v.c. 28, Aug. 21, 
1932. Abundant here. Druce, in his “ Comital Flora ” (1932) 
makes the extraordinary statement that this species is “ extinct 
in 28.”— J. W. Carr. 
Gentiana lingulata C. A. Agardh. var. praecox Towns. Thin 
chalk-turf on Banstead Downs, Surrey, June 14, 1932. — E. C. 
Wallace. Yes ; the terminal flower in each of my specimens 
has five petals and sepals, the lateral ones four ; this is a 
very usual arrangement in var. praecox. In the Isle of Wight 
the lateral flowers also may be pentamerous. — E. Drabble. 
Symphytum tuberosum L. Montpellier, Bristol, v.c. 34, 
June 6, 1889. — J. W. White. There was an immense quantity 
