‘TRhodora 
JOURNAL OF 
THE NEW ENGLAND BOTANICAL CLUB 
Vol. 12. July, 1910. No. 139. 
A SUMMER’S BOTANIZING IN EASTERN MAINE AND 
WESTERN NEW BRUNSWICK. 
M. L. FERNALD AND K. M. WIEGAND. 
Part II. TECHNICAL NOTES ON SOME OF THE PLANTS COLLECTED. 
(Plate 84.) 
LYCOPODIUM ANNOTINUM L., var. PUNGENS Desv. In dryish 
heath, Boot Cove, Lubec. Collected also by Kennedy, Williams, 
Collins, and Fernald at Cutler in 1902 and by Cushman on Great 
Wass Island in 1907 (Rrropona, xi. 13). 
LYCOPODIUM SABINAEFOLIUM Willd. Border of dry woods Ingle- 
side, Westfield, N. B. Previously known from the upper St. John. 
POTAMOGETON VasEYr Robbins. Cove in the St. John River near 
Ingleside Station, Westfield, New Brunswick. The first station, 
apparently, east of the Penobscot River. 
PANICUM TENNESSEENSE Ashe. Common in gravel along the Aroos- 
took River, extending to its mouth in New Brunswick; also collected 
in a clearing in Westfield, N. B., on the lower St. John. Previously 
unknown in New Brunswick. 
SETARIA VIRIDIS (L.) Beauv., var. WEINMANNI (R. & S.) Brand 
in Koch, Syn. ed. 3, 2690 (1905). A plant differing from the com- 
mon S. viridis in its depressed or spreading habit, narrower leaves 
(2-6 mm. wide) and slender spikes (excluding the bristles 3-6 mm. 
thick) is common on railway gravels and by roadsides in various parts 
of eastern and northern Maine, in New Brunswick and Quebec, and is 
found locally in Massachusetts. It occurs in such habitats about 
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