1922] Fernald,—Notes on the Flora of Nova Scotia 205 
S. CANADENSIS X UNILIGULATA. One clump, apparently of this 
origin, in a thicket near Five-River (Morris), Lake Shelburne Co. 
S. SEROTINA Ait., var. GIGANTEA (Ait.) Gray. Various stations 
from Yarmouth Co. to Lunenburg Co. 
SOLIDAGO -TENUIFOLIA Pursh. Many additional stations from 
Yarmouth and Digby Cos. to Halifax Co. 
*ASTER UNDULATUS L. LUNENBURG Co.: frequent in dry thickets 
and borders of woods about Bridgewater and northward at least to 
Wentzell Lake. 
*AsTER LinDLEYANUS T. & G. Hants Co.: border of old hillside 
woods, Mt. Uniacke. 
*ANTENNARIA PARLINII Fernald. LUNENBURG Co.: abundant at 
the border of dry pine and oak woods on steep slopes along guess 
River, Bridgewater. 
** ANAPHALIS MARGARITACEA (L.) B. & H., forma anochlora, n. 
f., foliis lineari-lanceolatis supra viridibus glabris sub inflorescentia 
valde reductis. 
Leaves linear-lanceolate, green and glabrous above, much reduced 
below the inflorescence.— Occasional throughout the range of the 
typical form. Type: dry clearings and burns near Five-River 
(Morris) Lake, Shelburne Co., Nova Scotia, September 10, 1921, 
Fernald & Long, no. 24,670, in Gray Herb. 
Forma anochlora, on account of its bright green upper leaf-surfaces, 
is often sent out as var. occidentalis Greene. "That variety, of more 
boreal range than the slender-leaved A. margaritacea and forma 
anochlora, has the leaves of more oblong tendency and scarcely 
reduced in size below the inflorescence. For discussion of it see 
Ruopora, xiii. 25-37 (1911). 
Ambrosia trifida L. Waste ground, Dartmouth. 
. **RuDBECKIA LACINIATA L., var. gaspereauensis, n. var., foliis 
subtus et petiolis et rhachibus pilosis. 
Lower surfaces of leaves, petioles and rhachises pilose-—Nova 
Scor1A: alluvial soil in thickets close to shore or on the strand of 
streams and brooks of the Gaspereau River system, Kings County. 
The type material collected at the border of an alder thicket by 
Black River (tributary to the Gaspereau), August 31, 1921, by Prof. 
H. G. Perry (TYPE in Gray Herb.). 
This indigenous and isolated Nova Scotian variety differs from the 
continental plant in the development of long pubescence, Mp 
R. laciniata being glabrous or merely scabrous. 
CoREOPSIS ROSEA Nutt. Additional stations, all in YARMOUTH 
Co.: Salmon (Greenville) Lake; Goven, St. John (Wilson) and Gil- 
filling Lakes. 
