1917] Hoffmann,—A glandular Form of Hieracium paniculatum 37 
iv. p. 229. Richmond Co.: reported in (17). New York Co.: 
reported in (17). Tioga Co.: Barton, Fenno (19). Cortland Co.: 
Truxton, 1894, K. M. Wiegand (21). Tompkins Co.: Renwick Park, 
Ithaca, 1896, E. Carss (9); Renwick Woods, Ithaca, July 21, 1916, 
F. P. Metcalf (10); Freeville, S. of Fir Tree swamp, 1882, F. C. C. & 
W. R. Dudley (12). Onondaga Co.: frequent (5); Minias, Vasey (9). 
Cayuga Co.: head of Owasco Lake, Moravia, 1879, C. Atwood (9). 
Wayne Co.: reported in (4), boggy ditch along roadside, W. of How- 
land’s Island, Savannah, July 3, 1916, K. M. Wiegand, F. P. Metcalf 
(10). Monroe Co.: Valley of Genessee River (2); near Rochester, 
C. Dewey, C. M. Booth, L. Holzer (4). Wet places in central and 
western part of the State, rare in eastern part, Peck & House (13). 
(To be continued.) 
A GLANDULAR Form or HIERACIUM PANICULATUM L.— The writer 
has collected in Berkshire County, Massachusetts, several specimens 
of Hieracium paniculatum L. which have the branches of the inflores- 
cence and even the upper part of the stem covered with stipitate 
glands. Britton and Brown in their Illustrated Flora, page 330 
describe this species as “quite glabrous or somewhat glandular.” 
An examination of the material in the New England Botanical Club 
collection and the Gray Herbarium shows that the glandular form is 
found more commonly on the Alleghany upland than off it. As the 
glandular form seems thus to have a certain geographic significance 
the writer suggests setting it off under the following name: 
HIERACIUM PANICULATUM L., forma glandulosum, nov. form., pedi- 
cellis et caule superiore glandulis vestitis. Specimens of this form 
have been collected in the following localities: Camden, Maine 
(M. L. Fernald); Breezy Point, New Hampshire (E. F. Williams); 
Townshend, Vermont (L. A. Wheeler); Sandisfield, Stockbridge, and 
Great Barrington, Massachusetts (R. Hoffmann); Providence, Rhode 
Island (J. F. Collins); Black Mountain, Kentucky (T. H. Kearney, 
Jr.). 
In specimens of this form the hairs characteristic of the base of the 
stem are found clothing the greater part of the main stem. In nearly 
all specimens of the typical smooth form the involucral scales at least 
show a glandular tendency, but in extreme forms even the involucre 
is perfectly glabrous.— Raren HorrMann, Kansas City, Missouri. 
