REPORT FOR l88l. 59 
glaucous; not at all csespitose, 13th August, 1878. — A. Ley. “I 
should name it BalfouriiP — J. T. Boswell. 
Poa Balfourii, Bab. Rocks at the head of Hartsop beck, West- 
moreland, 7th September, 1880. — A. Ley. 
Festuca ‘ MyurusJ L. ? Border of sown grass field, Smithy Mill, 
Adel, M.W. Yorks. — F. A. Lees. “ Is F. sciuroides.” — J. T. Boswell. 
Festuca ovina , var., major. Hill Wootton, Warwick, June, 1881 — 
R. L. Baker; and July, 1881 — H. Bromwich, “Why major V' — 
C. C. Babington. 
Festuca ovina , var., glauca. Rough pasture, Treverannen, 
Hereford, 25th June, 1881. — A. Ley. 
Bromus erectus, var. villosus. Whitnash, Warwick, June, 1881. — 
R. L. Baker. 
Bromus maximus , L. and B. tectorum , L. With Sainfoin in field, 
Sprowston, Norfolk, 2nd June, 1881. — E. F. Linton. 
Bromus secalinus, L. var. velutinus. Cult, field, Breinton, Here- 
ford, 2 1st July, 1 88c. — A. Ley. Whitnash, Warwick, Sept., 1881. 
H. Bromwich. Chessington, Surrey, 1880. — H. C. Watson. “ I 
think not ; but velutinus is probably a very inconstant form of 
secalinus .” — C. C. Babington. 
Bromus mollis , L. var. Lloy dianus. Turf walls running down to 
sea, Helston, Cornwall, 10th July, 1879. — J. Fraser. Garden, 
Thames-Ditton, 1876, and garden, 1877. — H. C. Watson. “Watson’s 
naming must stand. I know very little about it.” — C. C. Babington. 
Asplenium ‘ Germanicum , Weiss.’ Pass of Llanberis, Caer- 
narvon, June, 1870.- — T. Butler. “ I consider a form of 
septentrionale. The true plant grows on some nearly inaccessible 
rocks high up Llanberis Pass in very small quantity. I have myself 
seen it there.” — C. C. Babington. 
Nephr odium dilatatum , var. collinum. Cult, fronds, from roots 
found some years ago on rocks in Tilberthwaite, and named collinum 
by Mr. Newman. — E. A. Lomax. “ Possibly. But I have doubts.” 
C. C. Babington. 
Ophioglossum 1 ambiguum.' L’Ancresse Common, Guernsey, 
July, 1881. Mr. Charles Bailey says : — “ I should name these plants 
ambiguum , which, if correct, is an interesting discovery.” — J. E. 
Sunderland. “A luxuriant state of O. ambiguum I believe.”— J. 
T. Boswell. 
Fquisetum palustre , var. subnudum. Damp hollows, sand hills, 
Braunton Burrows, N. Devon, July, 1881. — W. B. Waterfall. 
Char a sp. Freshwater hollows among the sandhills by 
Birkdale Palace Hotel, south of Southport, Lancashire. — J. H. 
Lewis. “ Tolypella glomerata , Leonh. Interesting as westward ex- 
tension of the range of this species in England.” — H. and J. Groves. 
Lychnothamnus alopecuroides , Braun. Growing (abundantly 
14th July, 1881) with Ruppia spiralis , in a disused saltern, near the 
Coastguard Station, on the east side of the creek at Newtown, Isle of 
Wight. (See “ Proceedings of the Manchester Literary and Philoso- 
phical Society,” vol. xxi., p. 74.) — C. Bailey. 
Chara vulgaris , var. c. papillata , Wallr. Stagnant pool, Itch- 
ington Holt, Warwickshire. Confirmed by Mr. James Groves as an 
extreme state of the abovenamed variety. — J. E. Bagnall. 
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