1905] Haberer,— Plants of Oneida County, New York 107 
North Pond, is about ten miles south of White Lake. It is common 
in the Adirondacks. 
T Carex NOvAE-ANGLIAE Schw. In sandy soil on the border 
of a beaver meadow near the railroad station. (Eriophorum alpinum 
L., was found in the same meadow.) This Carex fairly carpets the 
ground in many sandy localities about North Lake, Atwell, N. Y. 
In the lamented Dr. Howe's admirable “New York species of 
Carex" (48 Rep. N. Y. Mus. Nat. Hist. 78), it is ascribed only to 
Rensselaer County, and in Paine (l. c. 155) to the Mt. Marcy region 
on the authority of Dewey and Knieskern. Reported from western 
New York. 
* CAREX MIRABILIS PERLONGA Fernald. Frequent on the rocky 
ridge. Banks of Sacandaga river, Fulton Co. Rocks, north side 
of the Mohawk at Little Falls. 
* CAREX SCOPARIA CONDENSA Fernald. Common on the rocky 
ridge. Slopes of Bald Mountain. Jefferson County, Crawe. 
* CAREX VESICARIA JEJUNA Fernald. Shallow waters of Round 
Lake and Deer Pond. North Lake and vicinity. Sand Lake and 
Raquette Falls specimens are cited by Mr. Fernald, RHopora, iii. 
53: 
f SALIX CANDIDA Fluegge. Beaver meadows at Deer Pond and 
near the railroad. These stations are fully fifty miles north of the 
cold elevated marshes of South Herkimer County where the plant is 
common. Also recorded there by Paine (l. c. 128). 
* CALLITRICHE HETEROPHYLLA Ph. Plentiful in White Lake outlet 
and the confluent stream of the other lakes, Cuming’s Creek. C. 
verna L., is the prevailing species in the Mohawk Valley. 
T PODOSTEMON CERATOPHYLLUM Mx. Frequent on stones in the 
rapid waters of White Lake outlet. Hitherto known only in Jeffer- 
son County. (Record in Catalogue, 123.) 
TMvRIOPHYLLUM HETEROPHYLLUM Mx.? Rather common in 
Long Lake, also a terrestrial form on low muddy shores. Ironde- 
quoit Bay, Booth in Catalogue, 81. 
* UTRICULARIA RESUPINATA B. D. Greene. Single flowering speci- 
men in mossy sloughs at Long Lake. “North Woods," B. D. 
Gilbert. The genus was well represented, U. cornuta Mx., t U. 
minor L., t U. intermedia Hayne and U. vulgaris L., were common 
in beaver meadows, the first mentioned in full bloom, in abundance, 
was like unto a field of low buttercups. These four species are 
