REPORT FOR I902. 
37 
Sisymbrium polyceratium, L. Alien. Birkenhead Docks, Cheshire 
(58), 2nd August 1902. Although this plant appears for the first time 
in the ‘Flora of Liverpool ’in 1902, it must have been established 
at Birkenhead and known to local botanists for over 30 years, as I 
have a specimen from this locality collected by Mr. H. S. Fisher in 
1872. — J. A. Wheldon. “ I have an earlier specimen of Mr. 
Fisher’s collected at Egremont, Cheshire, in August 1871.” — Charles 
Bailey. 
Camelina sativa, Cr. In a clover field near Salford, Bedfordshire, 
June 1902. I do not know the variety. — G. Claridge Druce. 
“C. eu-sativa^ Syme, I believe.” — Ed. 
Subularia aquatica^ Linn. Llyn-y-fan-fach, Carmarthenshire, 
vice-county 44. Very small plants, but quite characteristic and in 
good flower, with fruit well developed on the more forward specimens, 
2ist July 1902. Apparently a new record for South Wales province 
of H. C. Watson. The Carmarthenshire Fan is a lofty hill reaching 
the height of 2300 feet, with a long northward face of almost inacces- 
sible cliff, curving round a small lake (Llyn-y-fan-fach), and the whole 
flora bears quite a northern character ; e.g.^ Hieracium rivale, Galium 
boreale, Sedum Rhodiola, on the rocks; Isoetes, Subularia^ etc., in 
the lake. Cf. ‘Journal of Botany,’ October 1901, p. 344. — H. J. 
Riddelsdell. 
Reseda luiea, Linn. On the sandhills opposite St. Thomas’s 
Church, St. Anne’s-on-the-Sea, West Lancashire, 12th July, 30th 
August, and 20th September 1902. Not mentioned for vice-county 
60 in ‘Topographical Botany,’ ed. ii., p. 52, but doubtless recorded 
by some previous observer for this well-worked vice-county. The like 
remark applies to the other plants from this vice-county which I send 
up for this ‘ Report.’— Charles Bailey. 
Viola Riviniana, var. nemorosa, Neum., W., et Murb. Plentiful in 
Comber Wood, near Houghton, West Sussex, vice-county 13, 3rd May 
1902. Flowers large and handsome; spur coloured, scarcely furrowed. 
Unfortunately the colour is very fugitive, I have never yet succeeded 
in permanently preserving it. — Edward S. Marshall. “ Rightly 
named.”— W. H. Beeby. 
V. Faillouxi, Jordan. Near Denham, Buckinghamshire, June 
igo2. G. Claridge Druce. “Yes, this is very closely allied to a 
specimen named V. Faillouxi by M. Deseglise in the ‘ Herb. Mus. 
Brit.’ The difference seems to be in the lateral lobes of the stipules 
(in the Deseglise plant) being rather longer, and the peduncles longer, 
and the flowers rather larger.” — E. G. Baker. 
H, near V. carpatica, Borbas (?). Near Pilling Station, West 
Lancashire, vice-county 60, August 1902. J. A. Wheldon. “A 
form of V. carpalica, Borbas.” — E. G. Baker. 
