162 KANSAS ACADEMY OF SCIENCE. 
106. Chenopodium berlandieri Moq. Berlandier’s goosefoot. Barber county ; 
abundant in dry, broken ground. 
107. Chenopodium incanum ( Wats.) n.sp. Annual, erect, 14 dm. high, stout, 
grooved, much branched, the whole plant white-mealy; leaves thick, 14 em. long, 
triangular-hastate, slightly sinuate-dentate or entire; obtuse, short petioled; 
spikes panicled, compact, with short pedicils; calyx 14g mm. in breadth, seg- 
ments obtuse, nearly covering the fruit; seed horizontal, somewhat attached to 
the pericarp; embryo a complete ring. Norton and adjacent counties; very 
abundant in neglected fields on high dry prairies. 
108. Chenopodium leptophyllum Nutt. Narrow-leaved goosefoot. Central 
and western Kansas; frequent in dry situations. 
109. Chenopodium viride L. Green goosefoot. Atchison county. 
110. Corispermum villosum Rydb. Northern Kansas. 
111. Eriogonum alatum Torr. Winged eriogonum. Sherman county. 
112. Eriogonum flavum Nutt. Yellow eriogonum. Sherman county. 
113. Eriogonum jamesii Benth. Wallace and other western counties. 
114. Eurotia lanata Moq. White sage. Logan county. (H) 
115. Sueda diffusa Nutt. Spreading blite. Barton to Pratt counties; fre- 
quent in saline lands. 
116. Polygonum dumetorum L. Hedge buckwheat. Atchison and Shawnee 
counties: occasional. 
117. Polygonum macouni (Small). Macoun’s water-pepper. Perennial, some- 
what stout, decumbent or erect, clothed with appressed hairs; leaves lanceolate, 
obtuse; ocreae cylindric, fringed with long bristles; ocreolae ciliate; calyx white, 
or whitish. All through Kansas in wet places; rare. 
118. Croton lindheimerianus Scheele. Lindheimer’s croton. Southern Kan- 
sas, in dry soil. 
119. Celtis mississippiensis Bosc. Southern hackberry. Cherokee to Mont- 
gomery counties. Sent by Dr. W. 8. Newlon. 
120. Quercus texana Buckley. Texas red oak. Southeast Kansas; fre- 
quent. (H) 
121. Salix amygdaloides Anders. Peach-leafed willow. River and stream 
banks; common. 
122. Salix gracilis Anders. Limber twig willow. Eastern Kansas. 
123. Salix prinoides Pursh. Chestnut willow. Shawnee county; not common. 
FLORIFEROUS ENDOGENS. 
124. Lemna minima Phillipi. Least duckweed. Eastern Kansas. 
125. Lemna trinervis. Three-nerved duckweed. Cherokee county. (H) 
126. Wolffia papulifera Thompson. Pointed duckweed. Eastern Kansas, in 
still waters. 
127. Potamogeton lucens L. Shining pondweed. Comanche county. (H) 
128. Sagittaria platyphylla J.G. Smith. Ovate-leaved arrowhead. Cherokee 
county. (H) 
129, Iris hexagona Walt. Southern blue flag. Cherokee county. (H) 
130. Lilium canadense L. Wild yellow lily. Leavenworth and Jefferson 
counties. 
131. Ornithogalum umbellatum L. Star of Bethlehem. Douglas county. 
132. Trillium sessile L. Sessile-flowered trillium. Cherokee county. (H) 
133. Uvularia grandiflora Smith. Large-flowered bellwort. Cherokee 
county. (H) 
134. Commelina angustifolia. Narrow-leafed day-flower. Southwest Kan- 
sas; common. 
