REPORT FOR I903. 
21 
Club,’ 1867, While fully agreeing with Dr. Focke in the remarks 
given above, I am disposed to think the variation from the type 
is caused by the influence of 6". vulgaris, although, as I have said, 
S. squalidus is the prepotent parent. — G. C. D. 
Senecio Ct/ieraria,T>C. (^Cineraria maritima, Linn.). Thoroughly 
naturalised on the cliffs between Torquay and Babbicombe. With 
it an evident hybrid with S. Jacobaea occurred. July 1903. — G. 
Claridge Druce. 
Senecio campestris, DC. Westbury Downs, South Wilts, 20 
June 1903. — W. A. Shoolbred. Mr. Williams points out that 
the earliest name for this plant in the genus Senecio is S. integri- 
folius, Clairv., ‘ Man. Herb.,’ p. 41 (1811). 
Carduus crispus x nutans, Clandon Downs, Surrey, 29 July 
1903. — A. H. Wolley-Dod. a good intermediate hybrid. — G. C. D. 
Correct. — E. S. Marshall. 
Cfiicus tuberosus, Roth. Root from Avebury, Wilts, cult, at 
Thurcaston. — Rev. T. A. Preston. Comm. A. B. Jackson. 
Centaurea aspera, Linn. Alien ; canal bank, near Aintree, 
S. Lancs. (59), August 1903. A procumbent plant with pale 
purplish flowers and a profusion of interlacing branches. — J. A. 
Wheldon. Yes. — E. G. Baker. 
Ambrosia artejiiisicefolia, Linn. In the sandhills north of St. 
Thomas’s Church, St. Anne’s-on-the-Sea, West Lancashire (v.c. 60), 
19 Sept. 1903. Some sets of this alien, consisting of examples 
where the spikes are mainly staminiferous, and other examples 
with the spikes mainly pistilliferous, are sent in a more advanced 
state than the species reached in 1902. See Report, Vol. II. p. 150. 
In 1903 the same station yielded Gypsophila paniculata, Salvia 
verticillata, L. (both species flowering), and Bromus maximus, L. 
(in fruit). The station on the south side of the Church has been 
recently fenced in, and is now included in the Church grounds. 
— Charles Bailey. 
Hieracium Filosella, nr. var. concinnatum, F. J. H. Shirley. 
Derbyshire, 5 July 1903. — W. R. Linton. A form of concinnatum. 
— F. J. H. Also from Grwyne Valley, Heref. 13 August 1903. 
— Augustin Ley. 
Hieracium Schmidtii, Tausch, var. eustomon, Linton. In good 
quantity about the coast of Gower, v.c. 41, Glamorgan, from Pwll 
Du Head to Oxvvich Bay, and on Pennard Castle ; growing chiefly 
on the limestone cliffs, and also in the greensward ; June 1903, 
in company with Mr. Ley; also July 1903. — H. J. Riddelsdell. 
In ‘Prod. FI. Brit.,’ p. no, Mr. F. N. Williams speaks of Eustomon 
as ‘ a large flowered form a little on the way to crinigerum, having 
