394 
Herniaria glabra L. [Ref. x 21]. Cobe Common, Guernsey, 
June 13, 1926. — J. E. Lousley. Is H. ciliata Bab., the only 
species known in Guernsey. Vide Jour. Bot. lii., 330 (1914]. 
— H. W. Pugsley. 
Corrigiola littoralis L. Slapton Lea, S. Devon, Sept. 18, 1907. 
— H. W. Pugsley. 
Amaranthus Thunbergii det. G. C. Druce. Abbey Wood, W. 
Kent, v.c 16, 1926.— St. John Marriott. 
A. chlorostachys Willd. Waste ground, Avonmouth Dock, W. 
Glos., v.c. 34, Aug. 19, 1926. — Ida M. Roper. On further 
examination I think it should be labelled A. retroflexus L., and 
Mr. J. W. White agrees with me. The two species are similar 
in appearance, but the long bracts seem conclusive. — I. M. 
Roper. 
Clwnopodium opulifolium Schrad ? One big plant, two feet or 
more high ; waste ground between Greenwich and Woolwich, 
Kent, Oct. 20, 1926. Even at this late date very little fruit was 
ripe. — I. A. Williams. 
C. rubrum L. forma. Muddy edges of a pond on Peasemarsh 
near Guildford, Surrey, Sept. 18, 1926. — I. A. Williams. Is this 
small form or variety named ? It was growing very plentifully 
on mud which is under water in winter, but dry in summer. 
Typical rubrum is common in other parts of Peasemarsh and its 
neighbourhood, and seemed this year to have ripened its fruit 
before the small mud-form. Dunn does not record C. rubrum for 
south-west Surrey in his Flora of the district.— I. A. Williams. I 
have not seen this gathering, but from the data I take it to be var. 
pseudo-botryoides Wats. — H. S. Thompson. 
C. rubrum L. Near Pinner Wood Farm, Middlesex, Oct. 2, 
1926. — I. Helsby. 
Beta trigyna Wahlb. Teste W. R. Sherrin. Waste ground, 
Erith, W. Kent, v.c. 16, June 1926. — St. John Marriott. A rare 
alien from the Near East of Europe, only recorded in England at 
long intervals. Some plants flourished on made ground near 
Bristol from 1908 to 1914, but failed to become established. — 
I. M. Roper. 
Polygonum Convolvulus L., var. subalatum Lej. & Court. [Ref. 
1170]. Roadside near Cheam, Surrey, Sept. 18, 1926. This 
seems to be adventive in the Sutton neighbourhood, because 
I had never observed it until the new bye-pass roads were 
made in the district. It has since appeared in great abundance 
