REPORT FOR 1 9 10 . 
549 
^ecimens on my sheet received through the Watson Exchange 
Club ; but the deviation from type is inconsiderable. — E. S. 
Marshall. 
Sagina suMilata^ Presl. Sandy roadside, Brown Point, Arran, 
v.-c. 100, n.c.r., July 1910. — V. S. Travis. 
Spersula arvengis, L., var. 7 iana, Linton, Jersey, Portelet Bay, 
April 16, 1910. — C. E. Salmon. This is a very distinct variety, 
which I saw in cultivation at Bournemouth, a good many years ago, 
and thought worthy of sub-specific rank. The description of sub-var. 
ghitinosa, Lange (pro-var. = S. lartcitia, Wulf., non L.) in Rouy and 
Foucaud, I.C., p. 297, agrees very closely with Mr. Linton’s plant; 
it may be an earlier synonym ; — “ Plante basse, densement pubes- 
centeglutineuse ; feuilles courtes ; cymes plus denses a pedicelles 
courtes ; graines de la var. / 3 .” [i.e. S. vulgaris^ Boenn., which 
British botanists consider to be the true 6’. arvensis, L.]. Ap- 
parently a genuine native. — Edward S. Marshall. 
Claytonia perfoliata^ Don. Kennett Heath, Suffolk, May 16, 
1910. Naturalised under Scots pines for two or three miles along 
the boundary of Suffolk and Cambridgeshire. — C. E. Moss. 
Hypericum hujnifusum, Linn., forma. Cauldshiels Loch, near 
Melrose, November 7, 1910. Sent as local botanists think it is 
a distinct variety. It grows in abundance on shingle by the side of 
the loch, the altitude of which is about 870 feet. — I. M. Hayward. 
Mr. W. A. Boyd, of Faldonside, whose opinion carries great weight, 
thought this plant had some distinctive characters, but I am unable, 
I am afraid, to differentiate them, but perhaps members will care- 
fully examine their specimens. — G. Claridge Druce. The material 
received by me is mostly burnt up, as though it had grown in sunny, 
rocky ground. The sepals are somewhat glandular-serrate ancl 
blacic-dotted beneath ; this agrees with the description of var. 
H. deambe 7 is, Peterm., in ‘ Bab. Man.,’ p. 74, a plant which I do not 
know. — Edward S. Marshall. In spite of the sepals being 
rather more serrate than usual, I think this best left under type. It 
will not do for var. deawibens, Peterm. (which has usually serrate 
sepals), as that is a more straggling plant with stems “couchdes- 
radicantes.” — C. E. Salmon. 
Tilia [? platyphyllos. Scop.]. Natural wood, near Llanvair 
Discoed, Mon., v.-c. 35, June 23, 1910.— W. A. Shoolbred. The 
specimens are not typical, and are perhaps from shoots of suckers 
or of adventitious buds low down on the stems ; and neither flowers 
nor fruits are sent. However, all the material belongs to the small- 
leaved lime, T cordata ( 7 ! paT^oifolia^ Ehrh., T. 7 ili 7 iifolia, Scop.), 
