1923] Fernald & Wiegand,—Some Plants of New York 213 
Recorded by House! from the dunes of Jefferson County. Not 
very satisfactorily separable from C. stolonifera Michx., of which it 
may prove to be a variety. 
SATUREJA VULGARIS (L.) Fritsch, var. diminuta (Simon), n. comb. 
Clinopodium vulgare, var. diminutum Simon, Bull. Soe. Bot. Deux- 
Sevres (1903) 207. S. Clinopodium, y diminuta (Simon) Rouy, 
Fl. de France, xi. 337 (1909). 
We have been unable to see Simon’s original description, but Rouy 
characterizes var. diminuta as follows: “Plante réduite dans toutes 
ses parties; verticilles pauciflores." Such a plant, with foliage- 
leaves at most 2.3 cm. long, with the bracteal leaves barely exceeding 
the verticels and with the calyx shorter than in the ordinary plant 
(mature verticels only 1-2 cm. in diameter), is a characteristic weed 
of roadside-fencerows and borders of limy pastures near Watertown, 
Jefferson County, New York (Fernald, Wiegand & Eames, no. 14,431). 
AGALINIS PAUPERCULA (Gray) Britton. Frequent in peaty, sandy 
or damp rocky ground from Oswego County to St. Lawrence County. 
House records? the salt-marsh species, A. maritima Raf., as col- 
lected “at Mud Lake near Hannibal, Oswego County,” a most 
singular habitat for a halophytic species for, as Rowlee clearly states 
in his account of the region, “ Mud Lake is by no means a saline 
place.” It is bordered by a peaty quagmire full of Lycopodium 
inundatum L., Woodwardia virginica (L.) Sm., Eleocharis olivacea 
Torr., Scirpus subterminalis Torr., Drosera longifolia L., Utricularia 
gibba L., ete., back of which is an acid bog with the ordinary plants 
of acid bogs. Our plant from there is very characteristic A. pauper- 
cula. 
LONICERA GLAUCESCENS Rydb. Dry wooded sand dunes over- 
lying Silurian rock by Lake Ontario, northwest corner of Sandy Creek 
Township, Oswego County. 
Near if not quite the eastern limit of the species. 
CAMPANULA ULIGINOSA Rydb. Common in swales of Oswego 
County. 
C. aparinoides Pursh seems to be rare in northern, central and 
western New York, its place being taken by C. uliginosa, which is 
distinguished not only by its stiffer habit, narrower and more elongate 
1 House, N. Y. State Mus. Bull. nos. 243-244: 32 (1923).. 
2 House, N. Y. State Mus. Bull. nos. 205-206: 30 (1919) 
3 Rowlee, Am. Nat. xxxi. 795 (1897) 
