282 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 
been so named by Mr. Arthur Bennett. I have since found it 
on various sandy coasts, including Glamorgan and E. Sutherland. 
— E. S. M. 
Ofwnis repens, var. horrida, Lange. Sandy Coast, Stert, 
S. Somerset, 22 Aug. 1907. — E. S. Marshall. 
Trigonella ccerulea, Ser. With many other introduced plants 
on waste ground at Canton, Cardiff, Glam., Sept. 1907. Is it this 
species? — H. J. Riddelsdell. This would seem to deserve 
distinguishing by a varietal name, such as var. ohionga, for the 
fruiting raceme is cylindrical oblong instead of round or roundly 
ovate. The whole plant is more slender, and the leaves and 
stipules narrower, as also are the racemes, than in my specimen 
which coincides in these respects with the description. — E. F. L. 
Medicago lupulina, L., var. Willdetiowiana (Koch) ? Fruit 
hairy ; simple hairs whitish ; glandular hairs many, very minute. 
On railway banks, Sellack, Herefordshire, 8th July 1907. — Augus- 
tin Ley. The fruit is more or less hairy, but apparently not 
glandular-\\^\xy ; so that it is hardly the variety. I believe that var. 
scabra. Gray, is an earlier name. — E. S. M. Not the variety which 
has glandular hairs on the pods. In my specimens the pods are 
pilose but the hairs are eglandular. I have found the variety 
in three separate localities during the last two years, but always 
in garden ground. — A. B. Jackson. 
M. lupulina, L., var. Willdenowii, Boenn. Waste ground. 
Canton, Cardiff, Glam., Sept. 1907. Probably introduced. The 
fruit is covered with glandular hairs, which, however, tend to 
disappear as the fruit ripens and blackens. — H. J. Riddelsdell. 
Should be called var. scabra, Gray. — H. J. R. 
Melilotus indica, All., = M. parviflora, Desf. Very abundant 
on the sandhills, in the poultry area, on the north side of St. Anne’s- 
on-the-Sea, north-west Lancashire, v.-c. 60, 20th July 1907. 
Generally growing in the shade of large bushes of Sinapis nigra, 
and species of Che?iopodium. — Charles Bailey. 
Trifolium, Sp. Waste ground at Canton, Cardiff, Glam., Sept. 
1907. — H. J. Riddelsdell. T. diffusum, Ehrh. A Mediterranean 
species not previously noted for Britain so far as I can make out. 
Mr. Drummond and I determined it. — A. B. Jackson. 
T. striatum, Linn., ? var. € 7 rctum, Leight. East Pentire, 
Newquay, West Cornwall, v.-c. i, 14th July 1907. I take this 
to be var. erectufn, though it does not seem to agree with the 
