205 
B. Ficaria L., var. incumbens Bab. Coppice, Ashton Park, 
N. Somerset, April 3, 1922. Rather poor examples of a variation 
that appears to be rare in an extreme form. Dried specimens 
are too flaccid for handling unless pasted down. — Jas. W. White. 
I should put this under type : only one leaf on my specimen has 
the lobes slightly overlapping. — G.C.D. It may be so when alive, 
but the leaves (in my example) in the discomfort of being pressed 
have spread out their lobes and become var. divergens. — C.E.S. 
Pceonia corallina Retz. Origin, Steep Holm Island ; cult., 
Ledbury, May 22, 1922. In 1919 I distributed as Pceonict 
corallina specimens which had been gathered from the wrong 
plant and were P. peregrina. I now send specimens collected 
from the right plant, tide Mr. J. W. White. — S. H. Bickham. 
Capnoicles cava Moench. (= Corydalis tuberosa DC.). Wood, 
Stone Easton, N. Somerset, v.c. 6, May 19, 1922. Thoroughly 
naturalised. — Ida M. Roper. Yes. — C.C.L. The valid name for 
this plant is, I think, Coryclalis cava Schweigg & Koert. — H.W.P. 
Fumaria capreolata L. Climbing among rambler roses, Lam- 
bourne, W. Cornwall, Nov. 1922. — F. Rilstone. Yes, presumably 
my variety JBabingtonii, with poor flowers owing to the late date 
when collected. — H.W.P. 
F. . Potato ground, Lambourne, W. Cornwall, Nov. 
1922. — F. Rilstone. This is a remarkable Fumitor-y, distinct 
from anything that I have hitherto seen. It evidently belongs 
to the Agrarian subsection, but it differs from F. occidentalis 
through the absence of dark purple colouring about the apex of 
the upper petal, and in the fruit being rounded obtuse and not 
beaked. It has the aspect of a good species, for it produces 
perfect fruit, but I learn from Mr. Rilstone that all the sheets 
sent to the Club came from a single large plant, and that at 
present he can only find F. occidentalis in the spot where it 
occurred. It therefore seems likely that the plant collected was 
a hybrid — a cross of F. occidentalis probably with F. capreolata or 
possibly with F. Bastardii — in spite of its apparent fertility, and 
it is desirable that further material should be obtained, if possible, 
in order to determine its real status. — H.W.P. 
F. occidentalis Pugsley. (1) Garden weed, Lambourne, W. 
Cornwall, Sept. 1922.— F. Rilstone. Yes.— H.W.P. (2) Potato 
ground, Lambourne, W. Cornwall, Nov. 1922. — F. Rilstone. 
Yes, but with depauperate flowers, as might be expected in 
November. — H.W.P. 
