REPORT FOR igo6. 
231 
ation. The signs of transition are of two kinds; (i) the leaves are 
sliglitly divided ; (2) the base leaves are quite undivided, but the 
stem leaves are of the deeply divided type. The plant grows on 
the cliff face, in full exposure : the leaves are thick and succulent, 
and though they do not dry a good colour, yet they dry quickly 
and surely. First discovered here in July 1897. H. J. Riddels- 
DELL. “ Quite like my plant from Tongue Bay, W. Sutherland.” — 
E. S. Marshall. “ Mr. F. N. Williams (‘ Prod. FI. Brit ,’ p. 63) 
identifies this with the var. Geltnii, Briquet in ‘ Bull. Herb. Boiss.,’ 
1897, P- 475 ) which precedes the above-named. Gaudin’s var. 
integrifolia (‘FI. Helv.’ iii., p. 404, 1829) which Mr. Williams 
queries as synonymous should be compared.” — G. Claridge 
Druce. 
Hieracium Fi/osella, L , var. concinnatum, F. J. H. Wall 
tops and banks, Countisbury, N. Devon, 14th June 1906. New 
County Record ? — Augustin Ley. “ No, this has the heads pilose 
as well as glandular. I cannot see how it is separable from the 
type.” — E. S. Marshall. My specimens have glandular heads, 
but I have found in the same patch or cluster of H. Pilosella plants 
with glandular and with pilose heads ; the variety is a stout dwarf 
short stoloned plant, with crimson ligules, and glandular white hoary 
heads ; the present specimens do not exhibit these characters well. 
— W. R. L. 
H. stoloniflorum, Wimm. On the railway bank near Hanslope, 
Bucks, in great quantity, and extending its area, June 1906. — 
G. Claridge Druce. 
H. praealtum^ Vill. These are better specimens of the plant 
which I have already distributed through the Club from the same 
locality, i.e., railway banks, between Hanslope and Castlethorpe, 
Bucks, where it is very abundant, and is slightly increasing its 
range. Its continental range is general, other than Britain, 
Scandinavia, North Russia, Finland, Spain and Portugal, June 1906. 
— G. Claridge Druce.’ 
H. Schmidtii, Tausch., forma. By the river at Watersmeet, 
N. Devon, 14th June 1906. Best I suppose under the type. — 
Augustin Ley. “ Typical var. eustomon, Linton.” — A. Ley and 
W. R. L. 
H. argenteum, Fr., fide the Revs. A. Ley and W. R, Linton. 
On Craig Fawr, Treorchy, Glamorgan, 7th July 1906. Growing in. 
company with H. cambricum, Ley. The species is hitherto 
recorded from Radnorshire only in South Wales. The soil is the 
Pennant grit rock. The quantity of specimens available was small : 
and the quality not very good. — H. J. Riddelsdell. 
