REPORT FOR I901. 
1 1 
seems just the plant that I am calling subca 7 iina. Jn Baker’s ‘Mono- 
graph’ R. Crepiniana^ Desegl., appears as a synonym of R. glauca ; 
but this, in habit, tint, etc., looks too near to R. canina for that.’ In 
both the Kent and the Sussex plants the styles are woolly, as in glauca, 
and the name R. glauca, var. subcanina, Christ, fits them well.” — Ed. 
Pyrus scandlca, Asch. Limestone cliffs, Cefn Fedw, Denbigh, 24th 
June 1901. I believe this to be identical with the plant named for 
me “typical Aria suecica, Koehne,” by Prof. Koehne, from limestone 
cliffs near Merthyr Tydfil, Breconshire. See ‘Journ. Bot.,’ vol. 37, 
1897, p. 99. Notice in the plant now sent, that the corymb, as the 
fruit grows, is not flat-topped, as in P. Aria, but higher in the centre, 
as in P. Aucuparia ; also that the fruits soon become glabrous. 
Abundant in the Cefn Fedw cliffs. — Augustin Ley. ‘^P. scandlca, 
Asch. I agree.”— E. F. Linton. 
Callitriche obtusangula, Le Gall. Ken Moor, N. Somerset, 15th 
June 1901. Somerset records for this plant are very few. — J. W. 
White. 
Carum Bulbocastanwn, Koch. Cherry Hinton, Cambridgeshire, 
19th July 1901. — A. B. Jackson. 
Foe 7 iiculu 7 n vulgare. Mill. On made ground off the sandhills of 
the North Promenade, St. Anne’s-on-the-Sea, West Lancashire, 21st 
September 1901. Associated with it were CE 7 iothera bmmis, L., 
Diplotaxis tenuifolia, DC., etc. Not recorded for v.-c. 60 in ‘Topo- 
graphical Botany,’ p. 199. — Charles Bailey. “N. C. R.” — Ar. 
Bennett. “ Should such casual occurrences be taken seriously into 
account ?” — Ed. 
Apiu 77 i graveole 7 is, L. On shingle on the seashore at Bervie, 
between the railway and the sea, south-east Kincardineshire, 8th July 
1901. Not recorded for county 91 in ‘Topographical Botany,’ p. 189. 
In its immediate locality were a few plants of P 7 ieu 77 iaria 77 iaritl 77 ia, 
Hill. — Charles Bailey. “This is Ligustic 7 i 7 n scoticiwi, L. Mr. 
Bennett points out that his specimen is odd in having leafy involucres. 
Celery could hardly exist in such a situation.” — Ed. 
Heracleu 77 i Spho 7 idyliu 7 U, L., var. a 7 igustifoliu 7 n, Huds. Colby 
Glen, Isle of Man, August 1899. — S. Gasking. “Surely a monstrous 
growth only?” — Ar, Bennett. “Simply stunted; I saw dozens of 
such plants last year in the meadows adjoining my house. The 
variety is very different.” — Ed. 
Caucalis daucoides, L. Waste ground, St. Philips, Bristol, 27th 
June 1901. A rare plant in the West of England. — J. W. White. 
GaliicTn boreale, L. Llyn-y-fan-fach, v.-c. 44, Carmarthen, 1901. 
N.C. R. Cf. ‘Journ. Bot.’ October 1901, p. 344. — H. J. Riddelsdell. 
Solid ago Virgaurea, L., var. ca 77 ibrica (Huds.). Llanwrtyd Wells, 
Breconshire, June 1901. Growing upon rocks in good quantity by 
