REPORT FOR I 906 
199 
p. 84, from the vicinity of Moreton in the Marsh, Gloucester, but 
thought then to be an introduction. However our member, Mr. J. 
Walter White, has since found it in evidently native situations in up- 
land limestone pastures between Draycott and Cheddar, N. Somer- 
set, and has figured and described it in ‘ Journ. Bot,’ 1906, p. 365, 
t. 482 a. Mr. Weaver has also found it near Tilehurst, in Berkshire, 
where the writer has seen it growing in aboriginal turf. Mr. T. 
Hilton and Mr. C. E. Britton have found it on the Sussex and 
Surrey Downs. It flowers in early July, and the blossomy are 
cream-coloured ; the leaves are usually pinnatifid (var. pinnatifida^ 
Koch). This character and the narrower calyx, the teeth of which 
are clothed with long stiff cilise, and the longer filaments distinguish 
the plant from P, vulgaris. Specimens now distributed. 
Salvia marquandii, Druce. i^S. clandestina, Syme, E.B. iii, vii, 
p. 434, t. 1057), not of Linn. Vazon Bay, Guernsey (‘ Journ. Bot.’ 
1906, p. 40's t. 483). Specimens now distributed. 
X Orchis evansii. Orchis maculata, var. ericetorum x Habe- 
naria conopsea. This interesting hybrid, with the flowers very Orchis- 
like and without the long spur, had the more cylindric-spike and 
sweet perfume of conopsea. Both parents were in the vicinity where 
it grew, near Langton Lees, Berwick. Found with Mr. A. H. 
Evans in July, 1906 — G. Claridge Druce. 
X Ophrys muscifera X aranifera, Reichb. ‘ Ic. FI. Germ.’ 
)xiii. and xiv., t, 465. Wye Downs, Kent. W. R. Jeffrey, ex. 
“ Orchid Review,’ 1905, p. 233. (‘Journ. Bot.’ 1906, p. 347.) 
Liparis Loeselii, Rich., var. ovata, Riddelsdell. S. Wales. 
INow distributed. 
Agrostis verticillata, Vill. Vale, Guernsey, July, 1906. 
'New to the Channel Isles, and not hitherto recorded for Britain. 
IDescr. Stoloniferous, stem 6 in. to 24 in. high, geniculate-ascending. 
Heaves flat, glaucescent, ligule short truncate, panicle compact thyr- 
ssoidlobate, i to 4 inches long, whitish-green or often richly purple, 
the branches of the panicle short and covered with spikelets to their 
( base, glumes puberulent-scabid over their whole surface, pales equal 
obtuse. Last July, when in the company of Mr. E. D. Marquand, 
.at Vale, I saw a grass which I recognized as distinct from any known 
