REPORT FOR 1905. 
17I 
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Epilobium hirsutum x montanum, L. RostOn, S. Derbs., 22nd 
August 1905. — W. R. Linton, “Clearly right.” — E. S. Marshall, 
E. adnahtm x parviflorum. Open wood, Symond’s Yat, West 
Glouc., 27th July. 1905. — S. H. Bickham. “Yes,” — E. S. M. 
E. roseum x obscurum. Timber Yard, Malvern Link, Wor- 
cestershire, 31st July 1905. — S. H. Bickham, “The four speci- 
mens seen by me are correct, although one is much nearer to 
obscurum. But Mr. Bickham gave me a sheet from the same 
gathering, both specimens of which are clearly E. parvifi. x roseum. 
So there may be a mixture somewhere in the Club packet.” — 
Edw. S. Marshall. 
E. alsinefolium x obscurum. Reference No. 2901. Shingly 
banks of the Couglass Water, at 1,000 — 1,100 ft, near Tomintoul, 
v.-c. 94; Banff, 25th July 1905. Growing with the parents; a good 
intermediate. I have only once before seen this hybrid from 
Britain. — Edw. S. Marshall. A set also gathered at the same 
time and place by — W. A. Shoolbred. 
CEnoihera Lamarkiana, Ser. DC. { = CE. grajtdiflora, Lam., non 
Ait.). On the sand-hills in Messrs. Porritt’s timber-yard, St. Anne’s- 
on-the-Sea, South-west Lancashire, vice-co. 60, flowers and fruit, 
22nd July 1905, and root-leaves, 30th Sept. 1905. Doubts having 
been expressed as to whether the large-flowered (Enothera so 
plentiful on the Lancashire coasts (vice-co. 60 and 69) is the biennis 
of Linn., I sent examples of the St. Anne’s plants, with their 
* root-leaves, to Dr. W. O. Focke, of Bremen, under the name of 
CE. suaveoletis, Desf. ( = (E. gra 7 idiflora, Soland.), and he thinks 
they “ will prove to be a form of the famous variable (E. Lamarkia 7 ia, 
studied by De Vries.” — Charles Bailey. “ The description of (E. 
Lamarkiatia in the ‘ Prodromus ’ is ‘ Caule ramoso, foliis integer- 
rimis ovato-lanceolatis, petalis integris magnis, capsulis glabris 
cylindrico-tetragonis brevibus. fl. flavi.’” — G. C. Druce. 
Erigeron acre, L., ? var. or subsp. New County record. 
In small quantity on limestone cliffs near Inch Rory, Banff, 17th 
July 1905. The plants were very luxuriant, apparently perennial, 
and somewhat different in habit in other ways from the south- 
country form of the type. — W. A. Shoolbred. This certainly 
appears to be more than biennial ; but on careful comparison with 
descriptions in the new edition of ‘ Koch,’ I can only make it 
the typical plant with a somewhat simple inflorescence. — Ed. 
Anacyclus . Found as a casual at Cardiff Docks, v.-c. 41, 
Glamorgan, Sept. 1903. Professor P. Ascherson of Berlin remarks : 
