1922] Fernald & Weatherby,—Varieties of Geum canadense 49 
3. Var. texanum, n. var., planta humilis gracilisque; caulibus 3-4.5 
dm. altis, plus minusve villosis vel glabratis; foliorum caulinorum 
medianorum laminis 4—5 em. longis, segmento terminali rhombicali- 
ovato plerumque obtusisculo; sepalis extus et puberulis et sparse villos- 
is pilis longis; carpellis 60-100, 2-3 mm. longis (stylo excluso), hispidis 
et pubescentibus pilis brevibus subappressis.--LovrstaNa: vicinity 
of Alexandria, June 8, 1899, C. C. Bull, no. 595. OKLAHOMA: in woods 
near Idabel, McCurtain Co., May 20, 1916, H. M. Houghton, no. 
3686. Texas: moist soil, Onion Creek near Austin, May 17, 1918, 
M. S. Young, no. 161, Type in hb. Gray; Houston, April, 1840, 
Lindheimer. ei 
4. Var. camporum (Rydb.), n. comb. G. camporum Rydb. N. Am. 
Fl. xxii. pt. 5: 403 (1913).—Fields, meadows, roadsides and waste 
places, or, in the West, more often in woods: New Brunswick, Nova 
Scotia, eastern and northern Maine, eastern Massachusetts and 
rarely elsewhere in New England; central New York to western 
North Carolina and Alabama, west to North Dakota and Oklahoma. 
'The following specimens, mostly fruiting, may be cited as represen- 
tative. Nova Scoria: Port Mouton, Queens Co., Aug. 18, 1920, 
Bissell & Graves, no. 21,516; Weymouth, Digby Co., Aug. 21, 1920, 
Fernald et ai., no. 21,517. Massacuuserts: Brewster, Barnstable Co., 
Sept. 7, 1918, Fernald & Long, no. 16,879. New York: East Utica, 
July, 1899, Haberer, no. 1814. | Norra CanoriNa: Biltmore, July 
7 and Aug. 9, 1897, Biltmore Herb, no. 457a. ALABAMA: Lomax, June 
18, 1898, Earle & Baker. MissovRr: Jackson Co., July 11, 1893, 
Bush no. 92; southeast of Pacific, Aug. 9, 1910, Sherf, no. 899. Ox- 
LAHOMA: near Guthrie, Logan Co., June 14, 1914, G. W. Stevens, no. 
3285; near Alva, Woods Co., July 11, 1913, Stevens, no. 1678. 
5. Var. CAMPORUM, forma adenophorum, n. f., a praecedente differt 
sepalis extus sparse glandulosis, pedunculis pubescentibus trichomat- 
ibus articulatis glanduliferis plus minusve dense obsitis.— Massa- 
CHUSETTS: border of woods, Sherborn, July 8, 1911, M. L. Loomis, 
no. 207. MicuigAN: edge of hardwood, Turin, Marquette Co., 
July 8, 1901, Bronson Barlow. ltiiNOms: rich woods, Peoria, July, 
1904, F. E. McDonald, TYPE in hb. Gray; Ottawa, J. W. Hurtt. 
6. Var. Grimesii, n. var., caule petiolisque puberulis vel glabratis; 
foliis crassiusculis; pedunculis plerumque trichomatibus articulatis 
glandulosis obsitis; sepalis extus puberulis, sine pilis longis; stylorum 
internodiis superioribus inconspicue et brevissime hispidulis; carpel- 
lis 75-120, 3-4 mm. longis (stylo excluso) ad rostri basin sparse hispid- 
is sine pubescentia adpressa.— PENNSYLVANIA: Chester Co., 1858- 
1864, S. P. Sharples. Disrricr or CoLuMBIA: moist grassy places, 
Washington, June 18, 1896, E. S. Steele. VrRGINIA: Belfield, Green ville 
Co., June 19, 1893, Heller, no. 1004; rich wooded flood-plain near Will- 
iamsburg, May 23, 1921, Grimes no. 3605, TYPE in hb. Gray; wooded 
flood-plain, Williamsburg, May 17, 1921, Grimes, no. 3583. NORTH 
