(34) the botanical exchange club of the BRITISH ISLES. 1 74 
Hieracium. Nomenclature is that of the Rev. W. R. Lin- 
ton in ‘ British Hieracia, 1905.’ 
Hieracium Peleteria7inm, Merat, Origin, Dovedale, Derbs. ; 
cult. 5th June 1905, This plant retains its features unaltered after 
many years of cultivation, and even exaggerates them so as to 
become hardly distinguishable from the Channel Islands form. — 
Augustin Ley. 
H. Fiioseila, L., var. nigrcscens, Fr. (i.) Hort. Hanbury, no 
doubt from Glen Dole, Forfar ; cult. Sellack, 5th June 1905. 
(2.) Origin, Great Doward, Herefordshire; cult. June 1905. (3.) 
Origin, Selside, West Yorks; cult. 5th June 1905. Except in the 
larger size and general development of Mr. Hanbury’s Highland 
plant, all these seem to me to represent a single variety of H. 
Pilosella. — Augustin Ley. “ The Selside plant is not this variety, 
in my opinion. The long hairs of the flower-buds are whitish, 
instead of being black, as they should be in var. nigrescens ; the 
involucral black glands are also far too few.” — Edw. S. Marshall. 
“ I have long since given up growing Hieracia in the garden, but have 
little doubt that the Hieraciiun Pilosella var. nigrescens (i) was from 
a portion of a plant that the Rev. E. S. Marshall brought from 
'Canlochen Glen, Forfar, in 1892. He got it at an elevation of 
2,900 feet. As he issued specimens grown in his garden, it is 
almost certain that my plant would have been a portion of his, 
as I do not seem to have any wild specimens of my own collecting.” 
— Fred. J. Hanbury. 
11. anglicum., Fr., var. jac^di folium, F. J. H. Dollywaggon, 
Westmoreland, July 1905. This appears to be the most common 
and widely spread form of H, anglicum in the English Lakes. 
I met with it at Skelwith Force, Lake Lancashire, and at other 
places in that county. The type grew along with the variety at 
I)ollywaggon Pike. — Augustin Lev. 
//. Sclimidiii, Tausch. Glen Avon, Banff, N.B., 26th July 
1905- — W. A. Shoolbred. 
H. Sclwiidtii, Tausch, var. euslomon, Linton. Pwll-du head, 
Glamorgan, 2nd June 1903. This point is several miles east 
of Pennard Castle, and of the cliffs near the Castle from whence 
this hawk weed was sent to the Club by the Rev. H. J. Riddelsdell 
last year. Fine and plentiful at Pwll-du. — Augustin Lev. 
//. ruhicunduni, F. J. II. Origin, Hattercl Hills, Hereford. 
Cult. 9th June 1905. Self-sown seedlings in the garden at Sellack. 
— Augustin Li'.y. 
