475 
This is one of those frequent forms which are just between 
R. dumetorum and R. tomentella var. obtusifolia, and I think it 
is nearer the latter, but quite off type. — A. H. Wolley-Dod. 
Rosa rubiginosa Linn. f. Corstorphinae W.-Dod. No. 2073 
(A) and (B). Aberfeldy, Mid Perth, Aug. 20, 1928.- — Leg. 
J. G. Glassford. I am sending twenty sheets of this rose 
which was found by Mr. Glassford in Perthshire. I have 
made up the parcel in pairs of sheets, the labels being marked 
(A) and (B). They all came from the same clump of three 
bushes, but unfortunately they were mixed up in the packing 
so I am unable to say for certain which bush each specimen 
came from. But the branches sent by Mr. Glassford were 
large enough to cut up, and showed considerable variation 
in the size of the leaflets on the same branch. I have marked 
the most typical examples (A) and those less typical, though 
quite acceptable for the form, I have marked (B). In a few 
specimens, (B) is very little inferior to (A). — A. H. Wolley-Dod. 
Rosa micrantha Sm., var. hystrix Baker. Rewell Wood, 
Arundel, W. Sussex, v.c. 13, Oct. 2, 1928. — Ida M. Roper. 
This is R. micrantha Sm., but not var. hystrix, which is a small 
leafleted variety. Some of the leaflets on Miss Roper’s 
specimens are almost large enough for var. operta. The only 
departure from typical micrantha is the wedge-shaped base 
of the terminal leaflet. Keller has placed similar varieties 
under R. agrestis Savi, in spite of their hispid peduncles, 
thus making the shape of the leaflets of paramount importance, 
with which I hesitate to agree. — A. H. Wolley-Dod. 
Crataegus monogyna Jacq. var. microphylla Druce. Symonds 
Yat, W. Glos., v.c. 34, June 24, 1914.— W. A. Shoolbred. 
Comm : Dept, of Botany, National Museum of Wales. 
Drosera anglica x rotundifolia ( D . obovata Mert. and Koch. 
Moorland near Allt na h’Uamka, W. Inverness, v.c. 97, 
July 31, 1926. — W. A. Shoolbred. Comm : Dept, of Botany, 
National Museum of Wales. 
Callitriche intermedia Hoffm. [1267]. Pond at Lynch, 
near Wyke Regis, Dorset, June 14, 1928 — E. C. Wallace. 
A very interesting form of Callitriche, the first I have seen 
from our Islands. Dr. Williams in his Prod. FI. Brit. Part 9, 
509 (1912) records it from " Loch Alsh, a sea-inlet on the 
coast of Ross-shire (G. C. Druce) 1881 .” This is in the extreme 
south-west corner of v.c. 105, E. Ross. Williams divided the 
