96 : Rhodora [May 
* GOODYERA TESSELLATA Lodd. Frequent in cold mountainous 
woods at Long and Otter Lakes; wooded slopes of Bald Mountain, 
August, 1895. 
* GOODYERA REPENS OPHIOIDES Fernald. Woods at Otter Lake. 
Mountain trail, Hardscrabble Lake (alt. 2050 ft.), Wilmurt; and in 
woods on Frankfort Hill (alt. 1400 ft.), Herkimer County. Near 
Oneida Lake (alt. 370 ft.), found there also by H. D. House (Tor- 
reya, iii. 165). Paine records several localities for G. repens. It 
grows in cold woods north of White Lake, on slopes of Bald Moun- 
tain, and ridges of ravines near Utica (alt. goo ft.). 
LYCOPODIUM INUNDATUM L. Abundant on the sandy and boggy 
margins of the Lakes, and in the beaver meadows. Opposite Utica 
in a sand bog (Fern Bull. ix. 88); east of the city in sandy fields. 
Bald Mt., and sand plains of Rome, also by Paine (l. c. 180- 
181), head of Oneida Lake, also by House (l. c. 166). The latter 
reports it at Ohio (Fern Bull. x. 16) (1370 ft.), and W. E. Wolcott 
at several stations near North Lake, all in Herkimer County. This 
record indicates a generous distribution especially in this region 
(Central Basin, see Fern Bull. xii. 97-105), famous for its large 
number of orchids and Bofrychia. Utica is apparently the south- 
ern limit of the plant in Central New York. On the sandy shores 
of White Lake it was found well illustrating the fairy-ring like 
growth so interestingly described by Dr. B. L. Robinson, RHODORA, 
I. 28. 
* LYCOPODIUM CLAVATUM MONOSTACHYON Grev. & Hook. Com- 
mon on the shores of White Lake; mounds in a pasture near Ta. 
berg, Oneida Co., June 16, 1904. I first found this plant August 12, 
1895, on the slopes of Bald Mountain (Fern Bull. xii. 104), where it 
was associated with Carex leporina L. (see Fernald, Proc. Am. Acad., 
xxxvii. 479, and RHODORA, iv. 229) and failed to realize the rarity of 
either plant. Prof. Peck has collected the former in Essex and 
Washington Counties. 
* LyCOPODIUM CLAVATUM BREVISPICATUM Peck (54th Rep. N. Y. 
Mus. Nat. Hist. 162). On rocky slopes near White Lake, a form of 
club moss was found that resembles Professor Peck's plant from 
Wallface Mountain. “The leaves of the branches are closely im- 
bricated and strongly incurved, and the spikes are short, thick and 
generally very blunt.” 
* BOTRYCHIUM MATRICARIAE Spreng. Fine specimens on a mossy 
