REPORT FOR 1910. 
607 
but of later date. — G. Claridge Druce. Very good indeed ; 
a small form of it. — Edward S. Marshall. 
Glyceria plicata, Fries, [ref. No. U. 4]. Burwell Fen (Bank 
of Wicken Lode), Cambridge, June 1909. — G. Claridge Druce. 
Correct. — E. Hacked. Lower sheaths only a little plicate, in my 
larger specimen ; no anthers present, but the characters and 
habit suggest a small G. pedicellaia, Towns, {fluitans x plicata). 
The smaller specimen is very glaucous ; it has smooth sheaths, 
and a shorter, more branched inflorescence. Spikelets shorter ; 
glumes more distinctly three-toothed. Rather too far advanced ; 
perhaps only G. declinata, Breb. — Edward S. Marshall. 
Festnca rubra, L., var. fallax, Hackel. Coleman Road, 
Leicester, August 19, 1910. — A. R. Horwood. Festuca rubra, L., 
var. vulgaris, Gaud. The specimens show distinct runners. — E. 
Hacked. 
Bromus arvensis, L. Waste ground, Avonmouth, W. Gloucester, 
July 7, 1910. — J. W. White. Yes. — Otto Staff. Correct. — 
E. Hacked. 
Bromus inermis, Leyss. Coombe, Surrey, June 27, 1910. 
This grass is quite naturalised at Coombe (near Kingston), where it 
is very abundant all over a roadside strip of waste now enclosed 
within posts and chains. It is a tall-growing grass, reaching 
a height of five feet or so.— C. E. Britton. Correct.— A. B. 
Jackson and E. Hacked. 
Brotnus utiioloides, H. B. K. Ballast mounds, Witton Brook, 
North wich, v.-c. 58, September 1910. — W. Hodge. Correct. — 
E. Hacked. 
Bronms patulus, M. and K. In a field of sainfoin, Milbury 
Heath, W. Gloucester, July 30, 1910.— J. W. White. Bromus 
arvensis —O tto Staff and E. Hacked. 
Loliitm perenne, L., forma. Hall Road, v.-c. 59 S. Lancs., 
E. Hacked. 
