248 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 
Anthoxanthuvi odoratuvi, ]>., forma hngiaristata. Moorlarifl, 
Minehead, Somerset, June 1906. This form evidently falls under 
A. odoratu 7 H. I can find no notice taken of it in any books I have 
been able to consult : it is, however, a well marked form, in the 
slenderness of the small spikes as well as their lengthened awns. 
It appears to be abundant everywhere. Typical A. odoratuni, L., 
was growing in company with it in the locality from which I send 
these specimens.— Augustin Ley. “ The same form occurs in 
woodlands in Derbs., it has never received any name, and when 
submitted to Prof. Hackel, was not differentiated by him from the 
type.”— W. R. L. 
PhUum praiense, L., var. stolonifet'uni^ Bab. Coleman Rd., 
Leicester, 15. vii. 1906 (v.-c. 55). New County record. The 
stolonifcrous variety of Phleum pratense, bears anthers of a pale straw 
colour, but those of the var. nodosum are lavender colour. In other 
respects the former differs little from the latter, if the stolons are 
wanting, as in some cases often happens when plants are growing in 
heavy ground. This was the case with some of the specimens 
contributed, but they were all derived from plants exactly the 
same, from the same locality, as a specimen identified for me by 
Prof. Hackel as Babington’s variety. The var. nodosum is, if any- 
thing, more glaucous-looking, and of less elegant growth than the 
latter, but both are more or less bulbous, and differ in this and 
other respects from the more robust and usually fibrous-rooted type. 
— A. R. Horwood. 
Agrostis palustris, Huds., var. armata (Celak), Hackel ined. 
Cultivated ground, Highfield, Southampton, July and Aug. 1906. — 
A. B. Jackson, J. T. Rayner. A. alba, L., var. (Celak). — 
G. C. Druce. 
Agrostis verticillata, Vill. In the Channel Isles. ‘ Journ. 
Bot.,’ 1906, p. 320. — G. Claridge Druce. 
Calamagrostis Epigejos, Roth. Edge of limestone cliff, near 
Port Eynon, Glamorgan, v.-c. 41, 24th July, 1906. This is sent 
simply for the interest attaching to the habitat of the species in 
this County. — H. J. Riddelsdell. 
Weingaertneria canescetis, Bernh. Aberfan, Glamorgan, v. c. 41, 
30th June 1906. See Report B. E. C. 1904. Another series sent for 
the purpose of noting that I am convinced that the species is native 
in this county. There is a long narrow strip — ^ mile — of the sand- 
hills, on which it abounds, with no introduced plant accompanying 
it ; it is quite out of the influence of Docks or Works, and frequently 
occupies large spaces of the slopes and hollows of the dunes to the 
exclusion of almost all other vegetation.- -H. J. Riddelsdell. 
