(l 4 ) THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. I54 
cliffs around the harbour for about forty years, but not longer. 
The cliffs are of loose clay-slate, more or less calcareous : aspect 
N.E. — C. C. ViGURS. And from Nash Point, Glamorgan, v.-c. 41, 
May 1905. Mostly on quite inaccessible parts of the lias clifts. 
I was directed to the spot by the Rev. W. B'. Evans of Cowbridge 
School, who tells me that this is the only place where he knows the 
plant along this coast. Its status must remain doubtful. — H. J. 
Riddelsdell. 
Arahis petraea^ Lam., var. hispida, DC. Shingle by the Avon, 
near Tomintoul, Banff, v.-c. 94, nth July 1905. In plenty here 
and for two or three miles below. — W. A. Shoolbred. 
Ciirdamine pratensis^ L., var. palustris, Peterm. Gwills, New- 
lyn East, 17th May 1905; and Rialton, St. Columb Minor, 23rd 
May 1905; both near Newquay, W. Cornwall. The Gwills plants 
are all from one large patch ; some radical leaves have only three 
pairs of stalked leaflets while others have more. Mr. Bennett thus 
named for me a plant from Rialton three years ago, but as it 
was not returned to me I am unable to compare this gathering. — 
C. C. ViGURS. “The stalked, somewhat angular, denticulate 
leaflets seem to me rather to indicate the var. dentata^ Hayne and 
Welw.” — E. S. Marshall. Also a gathering from Yeldersley Lane, 
near Shirley, Derby, 26th May 1905. — W. R. Linton. “The 
Cornish plant is in my opinion the C. palustris, Peterm., which 
is the common British form. B'or a full account of C. palustris^ see 
Report 1893, p. 400.” — G. C. Druce. 
C. Jlexuosa, With., var. iimbrosa, Grcn. et Godr. No. 1354, 
near Hersham ; No. 1355, near Walton Common, Surrey, 7th May 
1905. These specimens vary somewhat, but they are all larger 
and more luxuriant with larger flowers than usual. So far as 
I know, this variety is only a shade form with leaves more angled 
than in the type. — A. H. Wolley-Dod. “ My specimen agrees 
with the description of var. umbrosa, G. et G., which is perhaps 
our commonest form.” — E. B". Linton. “ Good umbrosa, which is 
not our common plant of the Midlands. Grenier and Godron 
described it under C. sylvatica in ‘Flore de France.’” — G. C. 
Druce. 
Bunias orientalis, L. Origin, roadside in Peterstow parish, 
Ross, Herefordshire ; cult. June and Aug. 1905. — Augustin 
Ley. 
Erophtla ? Barry Island, v.-c. 41, May 1905. In some 
quantity over a small area of sandy ground. Plants large. Stems 
more or less ascending, never erect, as a rule arranged regularly 
