REPORT FOR 1910. 
. 539 
Fumaria, sp. Among potatoes, in a garden at Llandaff, v.-c. 
41, September lo, 1910. I should think F. Form, var. muralijormis^ 
Clavaud. Notes of the plant before drying are — “Flowers few, 
small, pale, weak. Sep. ^ to f as long as petal, ovate, toothed. 
Fruit small, narrow-necked, smooth, apiculate.” This points to- 
wards F. inuralis, Sonder : but the fr. when dry is obtuse : and so 
I suppose it is F. Borcei var. — H. J. Riddelsdell. A weak form of 
F. Form, Jord., near the variety that I have been naming var. 
serothia, Clavaud. — H. W. Pugsley. 
Fumaria Forcei, Jord. In August 1910, I met Mr. Percy 
Garner, on Rothley Plain, and he asked me the name of a plant 
which he had gathered close by. This proved to be A". Forest, Jord. 
I subsequently gathered a good supply and made enquiry as to 
its occurrence in the locality. A farm-hand said he “ remembered 
it twenty years or so ago, and they called it the ‘ little dill.’ ” Mr. 
Pugsley has seen specimens and confirmed the naming. New 
county record. — W. Bell. 
Farbarea . Marston Brickyards, Oxon, May 1910 [ref. 
No. 4119]. — G. Claridge Druce. Poor material, but I think 
F. preecox, Br., judging from the curved pod. — A. B. Jackson. 
I believe F. intermedia, Bor., but my example has only immature 
pods which seem to spread. I think, however, that these with 
age would ascend and form a more or less close raceme. — C. E. 
Salmon. 
Arabis hirsuta, Scop., var. . Sandy Cliff, Rhosili Bay, v.-c. 
41, June 15, 1910. This is much like a plant got by Mr. Marshall on 
the sand hills at Newton Nottage in 1902, and named by M. Rouy 
A. Retziana, Beurling, var. hispida. Clearly not A, cihata, R. Br. 
— H. J. Riddelsdell. This, though more advanced, is practically 
identical with my No. 2670, found by Mr. Shoolbred and myself 
on the sand hills at Newton Nottage, v.-c. 41 Glamorgan, July i, 
1902, which was identified by M. Rouy as A. Retziana, Beurling, 
var. hispida. The superficial resemblance to A. ciliata, Br., var. 
hispida, Syme, is very great; but the ciliation of the leaves is 
nothing like so long or so well marked. I h^ve not seen the sup- 
posed Pembrokeshire A. ciliata; but I suspect that dther the 
type — Retziana — ^^or this plant was mistaken for true ciliata, which 
is confined to the west side of Ireland, and unknown on the Con- 
tinent, according to Rouy. — Edward S. Marshall. 
Cochlearia ? [ref. No. 47]. Rock, North Berwick,^ June 
4, 1910. This somewhat striking plant grows on the islands in the 
Forth and in several places on the mainland, and seemed to me 
such an intermediate form, that I sent fresh specimens to Mr. Druce, 
