341 
except for their smaller heads, as appears general in cultivation 
throughout the genus. — H. W. Pugsley. 
H. pellucidum Laest. Lane-side, Coldharbour, Surrey, v.c. 17, 
June 13, 1925. Styles blackish. — D. G. Catcheside. This is the 
plant so named in Linton’s Handbook, but it was pointed out by 
Ley (Journ. Bot. xlvii, 13, 1909) that it should really be regarded 
as a form of H. serratifrons Almq. It is closely related to var. 
lepistoides (Johansson) and is the prevalent Hawkweed of this 
group in Surrey. — H. W. Pugsley. 
H. Near Farnham, Surrey. 1925. — R. J. Burdon. 
Under the arrangement of Linton’s Handbook this is apparently 
a form of H. rigidum var. scabrescens Dahlst. with the stem and 
foliage less scabrid than usual. But I think the plant is more 
closely related to II. tridentatum Fr. than to II. rigidum Hartm. — 
H. W. Pugsley. 
Leontodon autumncde L. forma. Ruan Pool, the Lizard, Corn- 
wall, Sept. 2, 1925. Growing on very wet, grassy bog. Is this 
a named form or variety ? — I. A. AVilliams. 
Lactuca Serriola L. Cheam, Surrey, v.c. 17, July 27, 1925. 
Leg. E. C. Wallace. Comm. D. G. Catcheside. 
L. saligna L. Marshes near Dartford, Kent, Aug. 5, 1925. — 
I. Helsby. ( 2 ) Stone, W. Kent, Aug. 1925. — St. J. Marriott. 
Erica ciliaris L. x Tetralix (Watsoni Benth.). Near Wareham, 
Dorset, Aug. 31, 1925. — L. B. Hall. 
E. ciliaris x Tetralix. Chasewater, Cornwall, v.c. 1, Sept. 
1894. — J. H. A. Steuart. Comm. Nat. Mus. of Wales. 
Limonium binervosum C. E. Salmon. Cliffs between St. 
Margaret’s Bay and Kingsdown, E. Kent, v.c. 15, Aug. 9, 1925. 
— D. G. Catcheside. Yes, the chalk cliff form mentioned in 
Journ. Bot. 1903, 70. — C. E. Salmon. 
Primula elatim Jacq. Stony Stratford, Essex, March 1889. — 
J. H. A. Steuart. Comm. Mat. Mus. of Wales. 
Gentiana lingulata var. praecox Towns. Banstead Downs, 
Surrey, v.c. 17, June 19, 1925. — E. C. Wallace. Comm. D. g! 
Catcheside. This flowers during the first three weeks of June, 
while G. amarella, which also occurs on the downs, does not begin 
to flower till well into August. — D. G. Catcheside. 
Symphytum peregrinum Ledeb. From a patch which is 
apparently well-established on a roadside near Lythe Hill, 
Haslemere, Surrey, June 24, 1925. — I. A. Williams. 
