40 Rhodora [FEBRUARY 
P. agrostoides Spreng. N. E. Bot. Club; Rnopona 3: 101 (1901). 
P. depauperatum Muhl. Gray; N. E. Bot. Club; Ruopona 3: 107 
(1901). 
P. linearifolium Scribn. Ruopora 3: 108 (1901). 
P. dichotomum L. 
P. lucidum Ashe. 
P. spretum Schultes. N. E. Bot. Club; Hitche. & Chase, N. Am. 
Sp. Pan. 202 (1910). 
P. huachucae, Var. silvicola H. & C.: Hitche. & Chase, l. c., 217 
(1910). 
. mplicatum Scribn. 
. oricola H. & C. 
. subvillosum Ashe. Gray; Hitche. & Chase, l. c., 228 (1910). 
. tennesseense Ashe. N. E. Bot. Club (Clarke specimen). 
. languidum H. & C. 
. tsugetorum Nash. 
. columbianum Scribn. 
. sphaerocarpon Ell. Gray. 
Ashei Pearson. 
. Seribnerianum Nash. Gray; Ruopoma 3: 113 (1901). 
. clandestinum L. N. E. Bot. Club (a ? fragment); Raopora 3: 
110 (1901). 
This list is, of course, a very incomplete one of the Panicum of 
Essex County, but it may prove of some interest and may also lead 
others who have collected in this county to report their finds. 
SYDYN 
CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS. 
A THIRD STATION IN VERMONT FOR CypERUS HOUGHTONII.— 
In an article in Ruopona for July, 1903, I told of my discovery of 
the second station for Cyperus Houghtonii Torr. in Vermont in 1901. 
Dr. Ezra Brainerd, who identified the plants for me, expressed doubt 
at the time as to it being native since it occurred but a few rods from a 
railroad. But during the past season his doubts were removed by 
the finding by himself of a third station for the plant in Castleton. 
This last station is so far from a railroad as to make him feel assured 
that the species is indigenous. It is in the same habitat as the stations 
spoken of in my article referred to above, dry shifting sand.— NELLIE 
F. Fiynn, Burlington, Vermont. 
Volume 14, no. 157, including pages 1 to 24, was issued 9 January, 1912 
