T. Serpyllum L. var. linneanus G. & G. ( 1 ) Ref. No. 4262. 
Grassy lane by Failand Golf Links, N. Somerset, v.c. 6, July 3, 
1920. — H.S.T. ( 2 ) Ref. No. 4264. Lane above Holford, Quan- 
tock Hills, Somerset, v.c. 5, July 29, 1920. — H. S. Thompson. 
( 1 ) Not unusually hairy. ( 2 ) Somewhat intermediate between 
vars. linneanus and angustifolius. — A B.J. 
Ajuga replans L. Wymondley Road, Hitchin, v.c. 20, May 16, 
1920. — J. E. Little. These plants are not glabrous (cf. Bentham). 
The flower-stem has not “lines of hairs bifarious on the stem'’ 
(cf. Hooker), but an even covering of long, soft hairs. The leaves 
are slightly pubescent above and more thinly so below. The 
stolons are more thinly covered with hairs. The calyx is exter- 
nally rather coarsely hirsute. — J.E.L. W. J. Hooker (1835), and 
Hooker and Arnott (1850) give glabrous or downy. — W. H. 
Pearsall. 
Plantago lanceolata L. var. depressa. Bostrup. Sandness, 
Mainland, Shetland, v.c. 112, July 17, 1920. — R. J. Burdon. 
No report from Mr. Baker. Are not these large specimens (with 
broad leaves) of var. sphaerostachya , M. & K. ? — H.S.T. 
P. maritima L. var? Balta Sound, Unst, Shetland, ‘on Ser- 
pentine, July, 24, 1920. — R. J. Burdon. Is this interesting plant 
the Sf small very hairy form from Shetland” which Syme called 
var. hirsuta ? I hope Mr. Baker will see specimens if he has not 
already. Is hirsuta different from var. lanata, Edmst. from N. 
Scotland ? — H.S.T. Without seeing my query (already in type) 
Mr. Baker writes: “Var. hirsuta Syme; but I hardly think var. 
hirsuta is distinct from var mimr Hook, “Brit. Flora,” 67 (1830). 
It is a most interesting and curious little plant, and is I expect 
what Edmonston (“ FI. of Shetland,” ed. 2, p. 80) meant by his 
P. hirsuta .” 
Littorella lacustris L. Small pool at c. 700 feet on Quantock, 
above Holford, Somerset, v.c. 5, July 29, 1920. Rare in Somer- 
set. — H. S. Thompson. This is the smaller sub-terrestrial 
flowering form ; the submerged form is much larger and non- 
flowering. — W. H.P. 
C. album L. var. candicans Lam. Roadside and cultivation on 
the peat of Shapwick Moor, N. Somerset, v.c. 6, August 1912. — 
J. W. White. 
Polygonum mite Schrank. Near Thorpe, Surrey, Aug. 21, 
1920. — L. B. Hall. Well-prepared specimens; achenes 3mm. 
P. mite Schrank ( — P. laxiflorum Weihe). — W. H. Pearsall. In 
