1907] | Evans,— Notes on New England Hepaticae,—V 13 
consider F. Asagrayana distinct or simply one of the extremes of a 
very variable species, the other being the robust normal form of F. 
Tamarisci. The first course seems to be still justifiable on account 
of the fact that no European forms of F. Tamarisci are known which 
exactly correspond with any of the American forms of F. Asagrayana. 
F. Tamarisci is a comparatively rare species in North America, and 
the following are the only New England stations known to the writer: 
Prospect Harbor, Maine (Mrs. Northrop); Blackstone, Rhode Island 
(J. L. Bennett); Seymour, Connecticut (4. W. E.). It has also been 
reported from Massachusetts. 
The following represent additions to local state floras, not included 
in the preceding notes: Frullania Brittoniae, Buckfield, Maine (J. 
A. Allen); Lophozia excisa, North Haven, Connecticut (A. W. E)!.; 
L. porphyroleuca, Willoughby, Vermont (Miss Lorenz) and Stafford, 
Connecticut (G. E. Nichols); Odontoschisma denudatum, Buckfield, 
Maine (J. A. Allen); Sphenolobus minutus, Mount Mansfield, Ver- 
mont (Miss Lorenz). The Maine record for Riccardia palmata and 
Rhode Island records for Grimaldia fragrans, Reboulia hemisphaerica, 
Riccardia sinuata, and Geocalyx graveolens, marked in the writer's 
Preliminary List with the sign ‘‘—” may now be marked with the sign 
“+”, the necessary specimens of these five species having been col- 
lected and communicated by J. F. Collins. 
'The census of New England Hepaticae now stands as follows:— 
Total number of species recorded, 141; number recorded from Maine, 
88; from New Hampshire, 105; from Vermont, 83; from Massachu- 
setts, 81; from Rhode Island, 64; from Connecticut, 102; common 
to all six states, 37. 
YALE UNIVERSITY. 
EXPLANATION OF PLATE 73. 
Calypogeia Sullivantii Aust. Fig. 1, part of stem, postical view, X 25; 
Fig. 2, part of stem, antical view, X 25; Fig. 3, cross section of stem, X 55; 
Fig. 4, surface view of stem, showing parts of four leaf-bases, X 55; Figs. 
5, 6, apices of leaves, X 55; Fig. 7, cells from middle of leaf, X 200; Fig. 8, 
underleaf, x 200. The figures were all drawn from specimens collected by 
the writer at Atsion, New Jersey, and distributed in Hep. Amer. 156 (as 
Kantia Sullivantii). 
Calypogeia tenuis (Aust.) Evans. Fig. 9, part of stem, postical view, 
X 25; Fig. 10, part of stem, antical view, X 25; Fig. 11, slender,stem, postical 
view, X 25; Fig. 12, cross section of stem, X 55; Fig. 13, cells from middle 
of leaf, x 200; Fig. 14, gemma, X 265. The figures were all drawn from the 
type specimen. 
‘These specimens have already been recorded and figured by Miss Haynes 
in the Bryologist 9: 99. pl. 9, f. 10-13. 1906. 
