REPORT FOR 1 906. 
245 
gonifoltus. The long narrow bright grass-green lower submerged 
leaves seem to remove it from either species. I could not find 
fruiting specimens, but I was very late in the season, Sept. 1906. — 
G. Claridge Druce. 
P .filifornns, Nolte. Coldisham Loch, Berwickshire. In great 
plenty on the somewhat muddy or sandy margin of the Loch, near 
which Caltha radicans, Forst., also grows. August 1906. The 
latter a New County Record. — G. Claridge Druce. 
Junciis tenuis^ VVilld. Gathered with Mrs. Davy in the grassy 
riding of a wood near Uckfield, growing in the cart tracks, that is 
not in the undisturbed woodland. A New County Record for Sussex. 
The curious increase of this and Sisyrinchium angustifolium^ both 
North American species, is very remarkable. June 1906. — G. 
Claridge Druce. “ The occurrence of this species in a wood is 
surely in favour of its being native. Some of the Kerry stations are 
remote from any probable source of introduction.” — E. S. Mar- 
shall. 
Cyperns fuscus, L. On the mud of a partly dried-up pond on 
Dorney Common, Bucks., in considerable quantity; also sparingly 
on the muddy margin of slow stream on the southern side of the 
Common, and very sparsely by a pond nearer Huntercombe; Bucks. 
Aug. 1906. A very interesting addition to the county flora and 
a notable extension of its range in Britain, this being now its most 
easterly and most northern locality. Surely it will be found in 
Berks. 1906 was a specially favourable year in the Thames Valley 
for the observation of aquatics ; owing to the prolonged drought 
many places were dried which normally are under water. — G. 
Claridge Druce. “ Little Chelsea, where it used to occur, is more 
easterly than Bucks.” — W. R. L. 
Eleocharis uniglmnis^ Schult., showing the creeping sobole. Sea 
coast between Heysham and Sunderland Point, W. Lancs. (60). 
loth July 1906. — A. Wilson and J. A. Wheldon. 
Schoenus ferrugineus, L. In Strath Tummel, Mid. Perth, 
Locus classicus. Growing on shallow peat above sandy soil. Mem- 
bers must excuse the absence of roots in the case of a scarce and 
local species, limited as it is to this locality, I felt it undesirable to 
destroy many plants. July 1905. — G. Claridge Druce. 
Carex B(xtininghausiana, Weihe. Swampy wood, Henfield, v.-c. 
13, June 1906. — T. Hilton. Clearly right, i.e., paniculata x 
remota ; but nearer to C. remota than any examples that I remember 
to have seen. — E. S. Marshall. 
