REPORT FOR I903. 
13 
ground at Llwydcoed, Glamorgan (41), September 1903. I query 
this identification, as I have no specimen to compare the plant 
with. The petals are quite twice as lon^ as the sepals, when 
fresh ; leaves rather broader than is usual in type. — H. J. Rid- 
DELSDELL. Koch, in ‘ Syn. FI. Germ.’, p. 119, remarks : “ Occurrit 
floribus minoribus et duplo majoribus, quae varietates, observante 
Schummelio, sexum polygamo-dioicum indicant.” But Rouy and 
Foucaud in ‘Flore de France,’ iii. 234, under S. graminea have a 
var. macropeiala, Wiesb., which is described as “ Plante robuste, 
verte, lachement diffuse ; feuilles lineaires ou sublanceolees ; fleurs 
tres longuement pedicellees; petales profoudement bipartits, 1-2 fois 
plus longs que les sepales.” I think Mr. Riddelsdell’s plants agree 
better with var. latifolia (Godron, sub Larbreae), “ Plante robuste, 
verte, lachement diffuse ; feuilles ovales-lanceolees ou largement 
lanc^oldes ; fleurs grandes ; petales profundement bipartits, depas- 
sant le calice ; ” and I have seen such also in Buckinghamshire. — 
G. C. D. I do not know tlie variety. Lloyd (FI. de I’Ouest) says : 
“ var. a cor. ^ plus longue que le cal.” — E. S. Marshall. 
Althaea hirsiita, Linn. Side of old limestone quarry tram- 
road, near Hirwaun, Glamorgan (41), Sept. 1903. Of casual oc- 
currence only. It occurs at Cardiff Docks with other casuals, and 
I believe is grown sometimes in gardens about Aberdare. — H. J. 
Riddelsdell. 
Malva sylvestris, Linn., var. lasiocarpa, Druce. Bullingdon, 
Oxford, Sept. 1892. See ‘FI, Berks,’ p. 112, and ‘Ann, Scot, Nat. 
Hist.’ (1S95), p. 47. — G. Claridge Druce. 
Erodiii 77 i ciciitarium^ var. triviale, Bab. Aintree, S. Lancs., 
June 1902. — J. A. Wheldon. Rouy and Foucaud, in ‘ Flore de 
France,’ iv., p. 107, consider E. triviale, Jordan, as synonymous 
with E. pimpinellifoUum, Sibth., var. genuinuni, Rouy and Fouc. 
In Jordan’s type in Herb. Brit. Mus. the leaves are rather more 
finely divided than in this specimen. — E. G. B. I think it is var. 
triviale, Bab., but I doubt if it is identical with Jordan’s E. triviale, 
and it is not E. pimpinellifolhan, Sibth., which has spotted petals, 
— G. C. D. 
* 
Euonymiis europaeus, Linn, forma. From limestone rocks at 
top of a hillside wood, Cefn, Breconshire (vc. 42), June 1903, 
This unusually lax form with cymes of very few flowers, generally 
one or two, is perhaps only caused by growing among other 
bushes. But the same conditions in other places do not always 
seem to produce this effect: in fact I do not remember to 
have seen it elsewhere. — H. J. Riddelsdell. Probably E. 
vulgaris (Mill. Diet. No. i.) Scop., var, a?igustifolius, Schultz ap. 
Reichb. FI. Excurs., p. 827, which is described in Rouy and 
Foucaud’s ‘Flore de France,’ iv. p. 159, as having “Feuilles plus 
