548 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 
order to watch the growth. Specimens sent are seedlings of this 
year. — C. E. Palmer. “A small (probably shade-grown) seedling 
state of E. parviflorum, Schreber.” — E S. Marshall. 
Epilobium roseum , Schreb. Ditton Park, Bucks, June 1896. New 
county record. — G. C. Druce. 
Epilobium obscurum , Schreb. Church Stretton, Salop, July 1897. 
— W. H. Painter. “Correct. The specimen sent to me is in- 
fertile.” — E. S. Marshall. 
Epilobium alsinefolium x palustre. Rocky burn, Ben Laigha, 
West Sutherland, v.c. 108, 28th July 1897. — E. S. Marshall and 
W. A. Shoolbred. 
E. an agall idifol iu m , Lam. Ben Lawers, north-east side, Mid-Perth, 
5th August 1897. — A. Somerville. “I still, with Messrs. Groves, 
prefer the name of E. alpinum ; even if the Linnean name be wrong, 
and it is not proved to be so, because a specimen representing it in 
his herbarium is now considered to be E. lactiflorum , Haussk., since 
the description in the ‘ Species Plantarum ’ will answer for alpinum, 
as well as for the latter, and some of the references do certainly not 
apply to lactiflorum ; moreover, the name E. alpinum in Hudson’s 
‘Flora Anglica’ precedes that of Lamarck.” — G. C. Druce. 
Conium maculatum, Linn. Castle meadows, Abergavenny, Mon- 
mouthshire, 8th June 1897. New county record. — Charles Bailey. 
Bupleurum falcatum , L. Road-side near Ongar, Essex, August 
1893. Coll. Mr. H. Goss; com. J. Cosmo Melvill; and by G. 
Claridge Druce, June 1895. 
Apium nodiflorum , Reichb. f., var. ocreatum , Bab. King’s Cove, 
west side of Arran; marshy spot near the sea, 26th July 1894. Con- 
firmed by the Rev. E. S. Marshall. It grew beside the type. — A. 
Somerville. 
Apium inundatum , Reichb. fil. By Renishaw Canal, Derby, 13th 
August 1897. A dry land form, which occurred in one or two spots 
above the water level. — W. R. Linton. “1 am rather doubtful 
about this. Is it not A. nodiflorum , var. repenst ” — E. G. Baker. 
“In all the mud forms of A. inundatum which I have seen there are 
leaflets showing transitions from the finely cut to the subentire ; these 
specimens do not show them. From the larger style and other 
characters I am inclined to refer this plant to a form of A. 
nodiflorum , but riper fruits are needed. In facies it is very like 
(although smaller) A. inundation, var. Moorei, which I have from 
Ireland through the kindness of Mr. S. A. Stewart. Herr Freyn 
considers it to be A. inundatumP — G. C. Druce. 
Carum verticillatum, Koch. Llanwrtyd and Nantymwyn, Brecon 
and Carmarthen, 13th July and 3rd August 1897. — Augustin Ley. 
