175 
REPORT FOR I905. 
(35) 
H. pseudonosmoides^ Dahlst. In great abundance for some 
yards by the river Avon, below Tomintoul, Banff, v.-c, 94, 18th 
July 1905. New county record. We also found it growing, but in 
less quantity, on the East Inverness bank of the Avon, below Bridge 
of Avon. — W. A. Shoolbred. 
II. stenolepisy Lindeb. forma. Near Peak Forest, Derbs., 
22nd June 1904. Heads somewhat larger; leaves commonly 
blotched, more oval in shape, and more symmetric at base ; 
petioles shorter, as compared with ‘Lindeberg, H. Sc. Exs.’ 129. 
— W. R. Linton. 
H. Cyathis, Ley. Cheddar Gorge, Somerset, 20th June 1905. 
This and H. Luna are decidedly the most abundant hawkweeds 
of Cheddar ; H. stenolepis and H. Sc/unidtii being less common. — 
Augustin Ley. 
H. hypochceroides, Gibson, var. lancifolium^ W. R. Linton. 
Limestone scaurs of the Ingleborough range, West Yorks, July 1903. 
Widely spread in this part of the Craven district, and shewing no 
approach to the type, which is still more abundant in that locality. 
I could wish that the specimens were better. — Augustin Ley. 
II. sagittahun, Lindeb., var. maculigcrum, W. R. L. Near 
Arnclifife, W. Yorks, 29th June 1904. I think it desirable to men- 
tion that the cultivated plant sent out as H. ntbiginosum from the 
Settle district is really maculigenim ; it is this plant {i)iaciiligerum) 
which Am. Dahlstedt pronounced on as very near his H. ere- 
hridens. H. rnbigmosum, which is almost equally prevalent and 
over the same area as maailigerum^ is very different. — W. R. Linton. 
A set of this var. also from Arncliffe, Kettlewell, and other parts 
of Upper Wharfedale, W. Yorks, June and July 1904. — Augustin 
I.,EY. On another set of the same from Fanfechan Cliff, Car- 
marthenshire, 4th July 1905, Mr. Ley writes: — “ I think that I may 
have been mistaken in identifying this plant with the variety 
named by Mr. Linton, but it clearly belongs to the aggregate 
H. sagittahun, Lindeb.” The Rev. W. R. Linton, however, passes 
it. — E d. 
II. ciliatiun, Almq., var. repa 7 id 7 un, Ley. Craig Rhiwarth, 
West Brecon, 10 June 1904. This is the plant sent by me to the 
Club in 1898 as II. rivale, F. J. H., from Craig Gledsiau, Brecon 
Beacons (see ‘Report,’ 1898, p. 579). It is very abundant at Craig 
Gledsiau (sandstone), Craig Rhiwarth (limestone), and at other 
stations in Breconshire. — Augustin Ley. The specimens are mis- 
labelled H. repandtun, Ley. Perhaps only forestalling their eleva- 
tion to specific rank. — G. C. Uruce. 
