402 
K. gracilis Pers., var. britannica Domin. (1) Brean Down, 
N. Somerset, June 14, 1924. ( 2 ) Kingdown Craggs, Mendip, 
N. Somerset, June 27, 1924. — H. S. Thompson. Correct. — A. 
Bennett. ( 3 ) Rocks above Bridge Valley Road, Clifton, W. Glos., 
June 20, 1924. Two specimens of No. 3 have a long interrupted 
spike. In all these gatherings the rachis and some of the spikelets 
are more or less hirsute. — Id. S. Thompson. 
Briza minor L. (1) Cornfield, near Hinton Admiral, Hants., 
July 15, 1926. ( 2 ) Parkstone, Dorset, July 21, 1926. — L. B. 
Hall. 
Eragrostis cilianensis (All.) Vigw. But. Waste ground, Splott, 
Cardiff, Glamorgan. Grain-sifting alien, Sept. 8, 1926. — A. E. 
Wade. Comm. Nat. Mus. of Wales. Eragrostis is a large cosmo- 
politan, but mostly sub-tropical, genus allied to Poa. None of the 
150 species are native in Britain ; but the genus is represented in 
Europe by about six elegant species, two of which, closely allied 
to this one, reach almost to Paris. “ Schinz and Keller ” give 
E. cilianensis (All.) Vigw. Lutati as growing on uncultivated 
ground about Geneve, Lausanne, etc, on the Lake of Geneva; 
very rare, and only casual elsewhere in Switzerland. — H. S. 
Thompson. 
Poa nemoralis L. var. Harestone Valley, Caterham, Surrey. 
[Ref. 1090]. July 4, 1926. — E. C. Wallace. I take this to be 
var. vulgaris of Ascherson and Graebner, Syn. Mitteleur. FI., 
p. 408. — W. O. Howarth. 
Glyceria plicata Fr. Plumstead, W. Kent, v.c. 16, 1926. — St. 
John Marriott. 
Festuca bromoides L., small form. Gravelly banks, Mitcham 
Common, Surrey, July 6, 1926. — D. G. Catcheside. This is F. 
Myuros L. (F. bromoides Savi). — W. O. Howarth. Yes ; merely a 
state. — E. Drabble. 
F. ambigua Le Gall. Beechamwell Warren, W. Norfolk, v.c. 
28, June 10, 1926. Growing intermixed with Festuca bromoides 
L., on sand. — J. E. Little. Correct, but very poor specimens. — 
A. Bennett. I agree ; the specimens show well the characteristic 
colouring of this species. — C. E. Salmon. 
F. ovina L. Mitcham Common, Surrey, July, 1926. — D. G. 
Catcheside. Is F. capillata Lam. — W. 0. Howarth. This is F. 
capillata Lam. The pales are not curved, the leaf has five bundles, 
and the sub-epidermal sclerenchyma is continuous. — E. Drabble. 
