330 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 
296. V. CANiNA X SYLVESTRis. Near Malvern Link. W. J. 
Rendall. ‘ Journ. Bot.’ p. 364. 
303. V. TRICOLOR, L., var. vtvariensis (Jord.). Sutherland. 
G. C. Druce. ‘ Ann. Scot. Nat. Hist.’ p. 41. 
406 Sagina Reuteri, Boiss., var. glabra, Ingham and 
Wheldon. ‘Journ. Bot.’ p. 109, t. 489^/. Differs from type in 
being glabrous and eglandular. The type is being found in various 
localities. To the counties recorded I may add Beds, 30, Bucks, 
24, Oxon, 23. 
421. Montia lamprosperma, Chamisso, in Linnaea vi. 
(1831) 564, t. vii., f. 2. This I first recorded as British at a meet- 
ing of the Linn. Soc. on December 17th, 1908, from specimens 
in my herbarium gathered in Glen Dochart, Perth, 1874, &c. 
This plant, which is in part the M. rhntlaris, Gmel., of Syme, 
E. B. ii. 136, was described by Chamisso (l.c.) “semine majori 
atro-castaneo nitente splendente leviter tenuiter areolato.” He 
distinguishes it from “ M. fontana^' which has “ semine minori 
nigro opaco densissime crassiusculo tuberculato quasi echinato t. vii. 
f. i. Utriusque varietatis M. minoris et rivularis, Gmel., Bad., semen 
prorsus idem.” 
In the last edition ot Koch’s “Synopsis” M. lamprospcrwa 
is kept distinct from M. minor, Gmel. Bad. i. 301, and AJ. rimilaris, 
Gmel., in the section “ B. B. an ihrem Grunde frei,” with seeds 
“ stark -glandzend, sprode, mit stumpfem Radicularrand, grdsser als 
minor und rivularis undeutlich-punktiert.” M. minor et rivularis 
are in section “An ihrem Grunde miteinander krz-zsgewachsen.” 
M. minor having seeds “ fast glanzlos, von groberen, spitzeren 
Warschen bekornelt ; Radicularrand scharf.” M. rivularis having 
seeds “gliinzend, deutlich, aber weniger (flacher) warzig ; die 
Warzen in Bogen gereiht, Schilder bildend ; sonst wir vor.” Osten- 
feld, ‘Botany of the Faeroes,’ iii. 853, states that AT. lamprosperma 
is the only form found in the Faeroes, and that this form is more 
northern than the one with small, dark, strongly tuberculate seeds 
(M. minor, Gmel.). It is the plant of Greenland, Iceland, Scandi- 
navia, and of Northern Russia, occurring also in Finland, Pomer- 
ania, and, as we have seen, in North Britain. The examination of 
Linnaeus’ specimen, labelled Moniia fonta 7 ia in Herb. Linn., showed 
