562 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 
Chenopodium album , L., var. viride, L. Beighton, Derby, nth 
August 1897, growing with C. album , and very distinct in habit, colour, 
and foliage, so as to look like a distinct species. — W. R. Linton. 
“A form of C. album , L., var. (b), cymosum , Koch, ‘Syn.,’ 524, with 
very leafy inflorescence.” — J. Freyn. “ C. viride , L., and C. album, 
var. cymosum, Koch, are synonymous.” — G. C. Druce. 
C. glomerulosum, Reichb. Dust heaps, Twerton, North Somerset, 
September 1897. Seen also at Tewkesbury at an earlier date. 
Possibly not observed before in Britain. But like C. opulifolium, 
which is, with us, always on waste heaps in the west, it is probable 
that this new form, when attention has been directed to it, will be 
found to occur more frequently than at present appears. The name 
has been confirmed by Prof. Sagorski. Undoubtedly a segregate of 
the album group, from which it does not differ in any character of 
fruit or seeds. But the habit, foliage, and inflorescence are distinctly 
marked. Usually a bushy plant of two to two and a half feet, with 
long, spreading branches. Stem stout, reddish, striate; foliage dull 
dark green ; leaves long-stalked, mostly elliptic, entire, blunt, a few 
irregularly angled and toothed. Inflorescence of densely aggregated 
glomerules in shortly-branched spiciform panicles, leafy in bud, be- 
coming naked in fruit. — Jas. W. White. “Not the plant described 
by Reichenbach in the ‘Flora Excursoria’ (‘cinerascens . . . glomerulis 
minimis demum remotis’) [? which] must be supposed to be a hybrid 
(‘nicht die von Reichenbach . . . die hybrid sein soil.’). Judging by 
the ripe seeds, your plant, which is certainly remarkable for its 
closely conglobated inflorescence, belongs to the group of forms 
known as Ch. album , L., a. spicatum, Koch, ‘Syn.,’ p. 524. It is 
perhaps the true Ch. serotinum which Linnaeus records from England. 
But it is necessary to have the stem-leaves for comparison, and these 
you have not sent me. It is not one of the varieties of Ch. album 
which have been recently distinguished by Krasan.” — J. Freyn. (See 
‘Journ. Bot.,’ 1898, p. 149.) “Herr Freyn names plants collected 
by me near Oxford as long ago as 1892, C. album, L., var. glomeru- 
losum (Reichb.), forma viridis, nec cinerasce?is . I should like Herr 
Freyn to see more specimens of Mr. White’s plant.” — G. C. Druce. 
C. opulifolium , Schrad. in DC., ‘FI. Fr.,’ v. (1815), 372. On 
waste ground near the railway, Didcot, Berks, August 1894. — G. 
Claridge Druce. 
C. hybridum, Linn., ‘Sp. PI.’ (1753), 219. Waste ground, Oxford, 
1892. — G. Claridge Druce. 
Atriplex sp. Reference No. 1922. Pebbly strand, Loch Fleet, 
East Sutherland, vice-county 107, 8th August 1897. — E. S. Marshall. 
“ A . angustifolia, Sm., forma.” — E. G. Baker. 
Atriplex triangularis, Willd. Mouth of River Alt, Lancashire, 
15th August 1897. This form is rather frequent on the Lancashire 
coast, and is always quite prostrate, the branches radiating from the 
