306 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 
Hieracium umbellatum , L. Atlow, S. Derbyshire, 22nd August, 
1890. Styles livid. Arvet-Touvet remarks in his account of H. 
umbellatum , “ Styles jaunes ou a la fin seulement un peu livides.” 
In these the styles were full livid in the freshly opened flowers. — - 
Wm. R. Linton. “ Forme IS! umbellatum, un peu glanduleuse sur les 
feuilles et plus ou moins herissee inferieurement. Nous avons des 
formes approchantes mais non identiques.” — Arvet-Touvet. 
H. . Near Bangor, October, 1890. Styles yellow. Involucre 
very pale green (when fresh). — John E. Griffith. “ H. umbellatum, 
L., var. paniculatum, Cariot.” — E. F. Linton. 
H. . Abersoch, Carnarvonshire, August, 1890. Styles 
yellow. This Hieracium grows on sand hills just the same as 
that from Morfa bychan ; these are not stunted forms, but they 
always grow dwarf, like the specimens sent. The styles are little 
different in both. The two places are about fifteen miles from each 
other, but on the same coast.” — John E. Griffith. “C’est bien 
une forme d 'umbellatum assez voisine mais non identique a la var. 
monticola (H. monlicola, Jord.).” — Arvet-Touvet. “An umbellatum 
form grown in an exposed position.” — F. J. Hanbury. 
H. . Morfa bychan, near Portmadoc, August, 1890. 
Styles light livid. — John E. Griffith. “These two are evidently 
forms of H. umbellatum , nearest var. monticola , of any I am acquainted 
with, but not exactly agreeing.” — E. F. Linton. “ Forme SumPellatum 
moins rapprochee que la precedente de la var. monticola!' 1 — Arvet- 
Touvet. 
H. auratum, Fries. Stony lake shore, Cranfield, Co. Antrim, 
27th July, 1890. A plentiful and widely spread plant in the two 
counties of Antrim and Down. We are indebted for the name to 
Mr. Hanbury, who extricated it from amongst our specimens of 
crocatum and corymbosum . — S. A. Stewart. “I have specimens of 
H. auratum, Fr., sent by Mr. Stewart to the Club as H. corymbosum, 
from Bushmills, Co. Antrim, of dates 5th August, 1871, and 14th 
August, 1882.” — E. F. Linton. 
H. corymbosum, Fr. Grasmere, Westmoreland, August, 1890. — • 
H. E. Fox. “ I concur in Mr. Fox’s naming.” — F. J. Hanbury. 
H. boreale , Fr., var.? Aberedw, Radnorshire, August, 1890. The 
Rev. A. Ley, who was with me when I collected these, and who 
indeed drew my attention to the plants, thought that they were 
different from H. boreale : for my own part they seem to me only a 
form of H. boreale grown in full exposure, and in some cases with 
fewer hairs about the lower part of the stem than in some of the more 
undoubted examples of H. boreale growing on the same bank. — W. H. 
Purchas. “ The boreale specimens of this gathering are not the type, 
and look a little like H. polyademum, Arvet-Touvet. Of these two 
sheets went to M. Arvet-Touvet for his opinion. Two specimens 
were mixed with this lot of H. boreale of a plant which only differs 
from H. auratum , Fr., in having (apparently) a dark style.” — E. F. 
Linton. “N’est pas mon H. polyademum! mais une forme ou variete 
interessante que l’on peut appeler adenophyllui?i du bo?'eale, et qui est 
assez exactement a cette espece ce qu’une autre variete que j’ai 
