420 
THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 
for it. This year, however, it was rediscovered by my friend Mr. 
Riddelsdell, who afterwards conducted me to the habitat which was 
within fifty yards of where Mr. Ellwood and I had made an ineffectual 
search. I have no doubt that it is native in the place, the exact 
locality of which I intentionally withhold. June, 1893. — G. Claridge 
Druce. 
Tragopogon orientalis , L. Railway-bank, Binton Green, near 
Berkswell, Warwickshire, July, 1893. See ‘Report’ for 1892. — 
H. Bromwich. 
Campanula rotundifolia , L., var. lancifolia , Koch. West corries, 
Cairngorm, Easterness, 26th July, 1893. — A. Somerville. Not var. 
lancifolia , which I understand to be a big plant with a number of 
large stem-leaves. — J. G. 
Moneses grandiflora, Salisb. Rothiemurchus Forest (under Finns 
sylvestris), Easterness, June, 1892. — A. Somerville. 
Erythrcea littoralis , Fries, b. minor , Hartman. Maelog Sands, 
Anglesey, June, 1893. — J. E. Griffith. I do not see how this 
differs from the common plant except that it is rather small. — J. G. 
Symphytum . I send a few specimens from shady lanes 
between Limpley Stoke and Monkton Combe, north-west Wiltshire, 
24th July, 1893, which differ from the pate?is form of S. officinale , 
which is common in the neighbourhood, in their leaves not being 
decurrent ; the root leaves are twice as broad as long. Is it the 
Scandinavian S. uplandicum , Nyrn. ? — Charles Bailey. “There is 
some difficulty in naming these plants, as the cultivated forms seem 
to have been crossed, and these escaping, it is almost impossible to 
trace their origin unless on the spot. This is certainly not the 
Caucasian form as we have it growing near here. Mr. Bailey has 
distributed somewhat similar plants as ‘ S. peregrinum] Led., Baker 
S. uplandicum , Nym., and the present specimens seem the same.” — 
A. Bennett. 
Solatium nigrum , L. var. Amongst potatoes, Milverton, Warwick- 
shire, Sept., 1893. — H. Bromwich. A very curious plant of which 
I should like to see more ; the calyx is different from any nigrum I 
have examined. — J. G. 
S. nigrum , L. var. luteo-virescens (Gmek). Near Poole, Dorset, 
22nd August, 1893. Boscombe, South Hants, 20th Sept., 1893. — - 
E. F. Linton. 
Limosella aquatica , L. Inchiquin Lake, near Corofin, Co. Clare, 
7th August, 1893.-— H. C. Levinge. ‘Turlough,’ near Tiernevan, 
Gort, Co. Galway, 21st August, 1893. Legit P. B. O’Kelly. Comm. 
H. C. Levinge. Of the long-petioled form from Inchiquin Lake, 
Mr. Levinge writes : — “ I very much regret that 1 was unable to 
procure enough of this form for distribution. I send these few bits, 
however, as I am anxious to know if this form of growth has been 
before observed. Some of the petioles in my mounted plants are up- 
wards of six inches long. The ‘short note’ in the ‘Journal of Botany’ for 
October, 1893 (p. 309) should be read, as it explains the circumstances 
under which the plant was gathered in this form.” It is not uncommon 
